Los Angeles Times

Families of 2 women lost in quake will donate cash

Pair apparently died in Nepal, relatives say, and aid for them is going to the region.

- By Maria L. LaGanga maria.laganga@latimes.com Twitter: @marialagan­ga

SEATTLE — The yellow ribbons still circle trees and light poles along leafy Madison Street, but the hope they symbolize is gone. The families of two 19-year-olds missing in Nepal say they now believe the longtime friends died in the devastatin­g April 25 earthquake.

“There are no words to describe the depths of our sorrow and loss,” they wrote on the same social media site they tapped to raise money for a private search for the young women. “We believe that our girls, Bailey Sage Meola, and Sydney Jo Schumacher, perished during the earthquake and catastroph­ic landslide in the Langtang region of Nepal.”

The recent graduates of Garfield High School left their hometown of Seattle in February for separate gapyear journeys and met up in Thailand on April 12. Together they headed to Katmandu and boarded a bus to the Langtang Valley for a long-planned trek.

The last time their families heard from them was April19.

Just days after the magnitude 7.8 earthquake hit, killing more than 8,200 people, the families turned to the crowd-funding site Indie-Go Go with a goal of raising $500 to help send Schumacher’s brothers to Nepal to scour the trail the women planned to take.

“This fund is intended to raise money to assist in locating and extracting Sydney & Bailey from the high altitude remote area of the Himalayas where we believe they are trapped with many others,” they wrote at the time.

The families raised more than $51,000. Will and Paul Schumacher left for the Langtang Valley less than a week after the quake. On May 8, hundreds gathered on the shores of Lake Washington for a candleligh­t vigil, praying for the pair’s safety.

The Schumacher brothers have since returned. On Thursday, the families made their dire announceme­nt.

“When Sydney’s brothers, Will and Paul, searched the entirety of the trek, and saw the immense and unfathomab­le destructio­n and devastatio­n, it was clear that there was no chance our girls had survived,” they wrote.

“Although our strong desire has been to hear final confirmati­on from the US Embassy, and to receive our girls’ remains, we haven’t, and may never,” they said. “We have been profoundly moved by the support and love we have received from near and from far, far away.”

The money will be donated “to aid the people & economy of the Langtang Valley region in the names of our beautiful daughters,” they said.

Thank you, they said.

 ?? Maria L. LaGanga
Los Angeles Times ?? SYDNEY JO SCHUMACHER’S mother, Diane Schumacher, standing at right, and Bailey SageMeola’s mother, Rochelle Brown, take part in a vigil this month.
Maria L. LaGanga Los Angeles Times SYDNEY JO SCHUMACHER’S mother, Diane Schumacher, standing at right, and Bailey SageMeola’s mother, Rochelle Brown, take part in a vigil this month.

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