Trapper recounts 'rough experience' stranded in Yukon bush for a week at -45 C - Action News
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Trapper recounts 'rough experience' stranded in Yukon bush for a week at -45 C

Tyrell Ollie and his cousin found themselves stuck in the remote Yukon bush for a week, after their snowmobile broke down. They had few provisions, and the temperature hovered around -45 C.

'I tried not to get scared out there, just trying to be strong and take care of my cousin,' said Tyrell Ollie

Ross River trapper Tyrell Ollie, seen here with some marten and wolverine, was stranded for a brutally cold week at a remote cabin, with his cousin. Their snowmobile had broken down. (Submitted by Robby Dick )

Tyrell Ollie learned a hard lesson last week, after a trip to his remote trapping cabin in Yukon turned into a week-long struggle to survive the bitter cold.

"Ittaught me not to rush," said Ollie. "Take your time, and make sure you have everything you need."

Ollie, it turned out, didn't have whathe needed when he set out from Ross River, Yukon, by snowmobile with his cousin Rebecca Johnny, on Jan. 5. The planwas to check Ollie's traps and stay at his cabin at Dragon Lake, north of Ross River but a snowmobile breakdown left them strandedpartway there.

"I just didn't have the right tools. I had my tools,but it wasn't the right ones to take the [snowmobile's] chaincase off," he recalled.

They were about 80kilometres fromRossRiver, up the Canol Road, and still about 23 kilometres from Dragon Lake. The temperature, already below20 C when they set outwassoon pushing45C.

"It got really cold on us.Three, four hours just dropped."

A view of the Canol Road. (Submitted by Tynan Thurmer)

Remarkably, there was a lifeline nearby another of Ollie's trapping cabins. It didn't have the supplies and firewoodthat theDragon Lake cabin had, but it was shelter.

"I cut wood and set rabbit snares and I just triedto be in a survival modeI learned from my elders," Ollie said.

"I tried not to get scared out there, just trying to be strong and take care of my cousin Rebecca, mostly."

They ended up staying for days, trying to keep warm while figuringout what to do.

At one point, theytriedwalking back to Ross River. They slogged for a few kilometres beforestopping under a tree to makea fire. They stayed two days and reconsideredtheir plan.

"I looked at the moon, and I seen that moon dog [lunar halo], and I was like, 'no way we'll make it, going back,'" Ollie said.

"So we turned around to the cabin and we hunkered down there andwe stayed there," Ollie said.

Search begins

By the end of the week,people in Ross River were worried. The two cousins were reported overdue to policeand other local officials.

"[Ollie]and I always talk trapping and we have a pretty good relationship," saidTynan Thurmer, the district conservation officer for Ross River.

Machines and equipment weren't working properly so we had to turn back.- Tynan Thurmer, district conservation officer

"So you know, as soon as I heard he was overdue, and the area he traps is so remote and harsh, you know, I waspretty gung-ho to get out there and help him."

Thurmer joined RCMPofficers as they set offon snowmobiles on Saturday evening, forDragon Lake. They made it about a third of the way there, Thurmer said.

"Given the temperatures, it was pushing 50 below zero and machines and equipment weren't working properly so we had to turn back."

The next day, they secured a helicopterout of Whitehorse and flew directly to Dragon Lake. Thurmer's heart sank when he saw Ollie'scabin.

A view of Dragon Lake, where Ollie and his cousin Rebecca Johnny were headed before they ran into trouble. (Submitted by Josh Barichello)

"It was quite evident that when we landed, no one had been there indays. You know, there was six inches of fresh snow, the cabin door was completely blownin.

"So then we thought, OK, they never made it."

'Every wood we could find'

Down the trail, huddled in the other small cabin, Ollie and Johnny were doing what they could to stay warm and keep their strength up.

Theyhadlittle dry firewood on hand, and no saw, so they used an axe to cut green trees and triednot to smoke themselves out. One of the cabin'swooden beds was hacked up to feed the fire.

"We looked for every wood we could find," Ollie said.

They ate what littlethey had some eggs, potatoes and onions. Ollieshot a grouseand they made broth. They drank NeoCitran to keep warm, he said.

Ollie saw a moose one day, across a beaver pond, but he felt too weak to shoot it and skin itand get it back to the cabin. He also didn't trust the ice on the beaver pond.

When it was Johnny's 24th birthday, they spent the day dreaming about food.

"We just sat there and talked about pineapples and oranges and that," Ollie said.

Searching the area

Leaving Dragon Lake, the rescue teamdecided to search the whole area from the chopper.

"I was just going off my knowledge of, you know, every cabin that I've been to along the road, and every area that Tyrell mentioned to me that he might be trapping out of," Thurmer said.

Partway back to Ross River, they saw them two figures standing on the trail below.

"We saw them waving," Thurmer said. "I was quite relieved."

Ross River, Yukon. (Nancy Thomson/CBC)

Ollie and Johnny were picked up and taken back to Ross River. Ollie said they were checked out for any injuries.

"Everything was OK, it was just my big toe and my fingertips was kind of cold," he said.

Thurmeris being lauded for his rescue efforts. Yukon's chief conservation officer Gordon Hitchcock has awarded him a Chief's Commendation Award of Merit, for "meritorious service in the face of extreme conditions."

"[Conservation officer]Thurmer's actions were directly related to the successful rescue," Hitchcock said in a statement.

Ollie isgrateful for the rescue, and relieved that he and Johnny are home safe. Hesays he'll never headout again in such cold weather.

"I'm very happy to see family and friends. I wish this would never happen to any other person, because it's a pretty rough experience, I tell you that."

Written by Paul Tukker, with files from Nancy Thomson