Snowboarder recounts tale of survival after spending 3 days stranded on Cypress Mountain Resort - Action News
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British Columbia

Snowboarder recounts tale of survival after spending 3 days stranded on Cypress Mountain Resort

Snowboarder Sebastien Boucher spent days alone on the North Shore mountains after getting lost in 2012.

'I had nothing for survival,' Sebastien Boucher recalls

Sebastien Boucher was stranded for three days at Cypress Mountain Resort in December 2012.

Four years ago,SebastienBoucherspent three nights alone at Cypress Mountain Resort after he got lost while snowboarding.

"I had just lost my best friend so I was really distracted," he recalled, saying he accidentally went out of bounds in his confusion.

"I fell 90 feet [27 metres] off of a cliff ...I was lost for three days with no food, no water, and no sleep."

North Shore Rescue (NSR) members have referencedBoucher's story this week as they search for a pair of hikers thatwent missing at the same resorton Christmas Day.

Chun Sek Lam, 64, and Roy Tin Hou Lee, 43, went snowshoeingtogether and never returned. Rescuers were called when their abandoned car was found in the parking lot.

NSR hasspent more thanthree days looking for the hikers, but heavy snowfall and high windshave forced crews to suspend search efforts more than once.

The weather is reminiscent of the freezing conditionsBoucher endured in 2012.

An experienced mountain camper, he said heran in place to keep warm andbuilt a makeshift shelter to protect himself from falling snow. Boucher said he tried his best to start a fire, but without luck.

"I had nothing for survival," he said. "I kind of just worked with everything I had with nature. I didn't have a lot of options."

Bouchersaid he chose to stay put due to poor visibility, waiting for rescue in"excruciating physical and mental pain."

To 'hell and back'

By the third day, the snowboardersaid he was ready to give up.

"For the first 24 hours, I wasn't thinking about myself. I was thinking about my best friend who passed away, so that didn't help me," Boucher said. "At one point I had to say, 'OK, Sebastian, stop thinking about him because then you're going to join him.'"

Boucher saidhe feels like he went to "hell and back,"telling CBC'sOn The Coastthat he lost consciousness about two dozen times in three days.

The snowboarder was rescued after NSR crewsspottedhis tracks from a helicopter. Boucher was taken to hospital with cuts and bruises.

Heattributes his survival tophysical fitness and a strong will to live.

"I always tell this to people: you really don't know how strong you are until being strong is the only choice you have," he said.

As for the missing snowshoers, Bouchersaid things don't look good.

"The chance of them to be alive at this moment is unlikely," the snowboarder said."I hate saying that, but that's the reality and people need to understand how dangerous it is out there."

With files from the CBC's On The Coast.


To hear the full interview listen to audio labelledSnowboarder recounts tale of survival after three days stranded on Cypress Mountain