Injured hunter survives 19 days in the woods

Dave

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72 year old hunter survives 19 days in the Mendocino CA National Forest:

http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-505263_...ra-and-fauna-during-19-day-wilderness-ordeal/

A 72-year-old California man is recovering after he was found alive Saturday after spending nearly three weeks lost alone in the woods. Gene Penaflor was finally reunited with his family Saturday, hours after he was spotted in the wilderness of northern California.Sharon Bura, Penaflor's niece, said, "My husband came into the room and they were like, 'They found Uncle Gene alive!' And I was like, 'What! What!' And as soon as I heard that I started crying because I was just so happy that he was safe."

The ordeal began last month deep in the Mendocino National Forest. Penaflor split up from his hunting partner and later fell and blacked out. Jeremy Penaflor, his son, said, "When we heard the news it was devastating. It was as if somebody took our hearts and stepped on it so we felt helpless."

Nearly 20 agencies spent four days looking for Penaflor. But with a storm moving in and no sign of the missing hunter, the search was called off.

For 19 days, Penaflor -- a lover of the outdoors -- survived on the skills he knew. "To keep himself warm, he gathered up dry leaves and slept underneath it, and he also ate squirrels, some lizards, snakes and algae from the water to survive," Jeremy said.

http://www.latimes.com/local/la-me-hunter-survival-20131015,0,6934132.story

He shot squirrels in the head so their bodies would be intact for meals.

He caught frogs, lizards and a two-foot brown snake, killing them with a rock and toasting them thoroughly so he would not get salmonella.

Each night, before burying himself under rotting leaves, he carefully covered his fire with gravel to prevent it from spreading.

Gene Penaflor made it through 19 days lost in the wilds of Northern California's Mendocino National Forest by going into "survival mode," his son, Gale Penaflor, 37, said Monday.
The 72-year-old retiree was back home in San Francisco, 13 pounds lighter than when he disappeared and his voice raspy, but otherwise in excellent health, his family said. Penaflor got lost during a deer hunting trip in treacherous terrain marked by jagged cliffs and slippery shale, and shrouded by thick fog. Other hunters discovered him Saturday.

"Mentally, he was telling us, he was in survival mode," Gale Penaflor said. "He really wasn't thinking about anything else. Trying to stay alive kept him busy, and that is what kept him going."

Gene Penaflor, a native of the Philippines, and a longtime friend were camped at 6,000-foot elevation when they separated to stalk deer. Penaflor's companion reported him missing in an area known as Bloody Rock early Sept. 24. Penaflor had fallen into a crevice, hit his head and lost consciousness. He awoke disoriented in the fog, the Mendocino County Sheriff's Department said.

"I thought my kneecap was broken," Penaflor told reporters Sunday. "After that all went dead. I was passed out. I don't know for how long."

Authorities said Penaflor walked around for a while before realizing he was lost and set up camp under a tree near a stream. The son said his father had two garbage bags with him and wore them to keep himself dry. Temperatures dipped to 25 degrees. "He said his boots were really key," Gale Penaflor said. "They're Gore-Tex."

Gene Penaflor also had a lighter he used to build a fire, throwing his prey — three squirrels, one snake, two frogs and two lizards — directly on the embers. He said his ammunition, intended for deer, would have shattered a squirrel so he carefully aimed for the head.

"He really is cognitive of salmonella and wanted to make sure they were thoroughly cooked before he ate them," Gale Penaflor said. "He said the taste was OK. He told us, 'I can't really explain it, but it wasn't bad. I was just eating.' "

He also worried about accidentally starting a forest fire. "He covered the fire with gravel so it wouldn't start a forest fire, but the embers would still be lit when he woke up," Gale Penaflor said. The elder Penaflor had a cut on his chin from his fall, and tried to keep it clean so it would not become infected.

Searchers with dogs and in helicopters scanned the wilderness for days before a storm forced them to suspend the effort Sept. 27. Gene Penaflor had spotted a helicopter and tried to send smoke signals, but the canopy of the tree must have impeded the view, he told his sons.

The search resumed Saturday, when a hunter called the Mendocino County sheriff's dispatcher and reported that a man at the bottom of a canyon was screaming for help. The hunter was with a group of about eight. One of them scrambled down to Penaflor and then summoned the others to help. They used their coats and sticks to make a stretcher and carried him out.

Several hours passed before rescue units arrived "due to the difficult terrain," according to a sheriff's office incident report.

"Gene was evaluated medically, and it was determined he should be extracted via helicopter," the report said.

Gale Penaflor said his father had started yelling for help after spotting the group of hunters. Though he was weak when he was found, he was released from the hospital after only about three hours, Gale Penaflor said.

"He had been drinking water regularly, his blood pressure was good, and they checked out his vitals," Gale Penaflor said. "He was in great shape."

Gene Penaflor's worried family had participated in the searches. They knew he was a skilled outdoorsman — he has been hunting for nearly 30 years — but worried when the days passed and snow began falling.
 
I think American would be a lot better place to live in if more people could do what he did. We have too many weak Sheeple.
 
Haggis is about that age...

Thanks for the toss under the bus Al. Geez, I aint no spring chicken but I got a few decades to go before I reach the geezer mark. And to think my kids call you Uncle Al.

Isn't that just a normal hunting trip for Mark?

Well I ain't never ate lizard. The rest though are pretty tasty.
 
You guys are too funny... and yes, there are too many "weak sheeple" in America, though I'm tempted to qualify that phrase by saying "weak, morbidly-obese sheeple." Some of those people could take their cue from this guy who got lost in the woods: at least HE'S OUT THERE IN THE WILDERNESS, and not just rotting away on some couch like most American sofa taters, 10-4? Ya know, if we're ever confronted by a predatory extraterrestrial species that devours humans, the U.S. will be like the buffet restaurant of choice for those critters: more meat per serving, marbled with plenty of fat, and just enough of those government microchips to make for splendid seasoning, LOL. :lol :eek: :lol Anyway, the dude did pretty well in the field, considering his age. I know this: in such a situation, the most valuable asset any hand can have is that gray matter between the ears... looks like this Penaflor guy put his to good use, AFTER he got lost in the field.
 
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