He lost his wedding ring at a B.C. ski resort. 4 months later, it was found
Greg Hedges held out hope his wedding ring would be recovered after losing it in the snow at a ski resort
Honey, I found my wedding ring.
That's the message Greg Hedges was able toshare with his wife more than four monthsafter a holiday ski trip gone wrong.
In January, Hedges and his family were on holidayfrom Australia and skiing at Big White Ski Resort, southeast of Kelowna, B.C.
At one point, Hedges tried to take a picture of his friends as they rode up the chairlift.
Hedges pulled off hisglove and stuck his left hand in the snow to balance himself. Instantly, he felt the blood vessels in his finger constrict from the cold and his wedding ring fall off.
When he pulled out his hand, the ring was gone. "I just went, 'Oh no,'" he recalled.
Hedges searched in the snow with a group, but came up empty handed. He flagged the missing ring to the resort's concierge and flew backhome to Sydney.
"I just said to myself quietly, 'Look, one day, thatthing just might turn up in the spring, if someone's got the diligence and the care togo and have a look for it,'" he said.
Final search
Enter Eric Robert.
The staffer at Big White Ski Resort embarked on a final expedition, looking for the ring in late May.
A rotating group of staffhad searched the area multipletimes over the winter, but were thwarted by the constant snow.
This time, the grass was exposed and the area clear. Robert came across a flat rock and spotted the ring.
"It felt it really good. Very rewarding," Robert said. "Wedidn't really give up hope."
'I can still feel the ring'
Hedges learned of the recovery last Friday in a phone call from the resort'sconcierge.
"I was just absolutely thrilled," he said. "To lose it was very, very upsetting."
The ring is en route to Sydney via registered mail, and Hedgesis expecting to receive it June 5.
"I can still feel the ring on my fourth finger," he said."I can't wait to get it back on."
With files from Laurence Watt and CBC's Daybreak South