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British Columbia

Snowboarder opts to repay $10K for B.C. mountain rescue

A snowboarder who spent two cold nights lost at B.C.'s Cypress Mountain Resort says he is ready to pay back the costs of the search and rescue operation that saved his life.

Sebastien Boucher also made educational video with Cypress Mountain Resort

Sebastien Boucher, says he plans to repay those who rescued him with a $10,000 donation. (Facebook)

A snowboarder who spent two cold nights lost at B.C.'s Cypress Mountain Resortsays he is ready to pay back the costs of the search and rescue operation that saved his life.

Last December, snowboarder Sebastien Boucher, 33, snowboarded out of bounds and quickly ended up lost and disoriented on the steep snow-covered slopes.

Three helicopters and dozens of volunteers finally found him and airlifted him to safety an effort that cost thousands of dollars and required hundreds of hours fromvolunteer searchers.

At the time, Cypress Mountain said it would charge Boucher $10,000 for the cost of the rescue and the money would be donated to the all-volunteer North Shore Rescue team.

In December, Sebastien Boucher told CBC News that he had been distracted by news of a friend's death the day he got lost on the mountain. (CBC)

But officials at the ski hill had a change of heart when Boucher offered to work with them on an educational video about his experience. Cypress says the value of that would far exceed what it was going to charge.

But Boucher then raised the $10,000 anyway by holding a hockey tournament back in his hometown of Ottawa.

Now he plans to present that cash to the North Shore Rescue team next week as a 'thank you' to those who saved his life.

"He is just really thankful for his rescue," said North Shore Rescue spokesman Tim Jones.