The Guardian Australia

Korean hiker shares survival story after rescue from Australian bush

-

A South Korean hiker lost in dense Australian bushland for six days without food and in near-freezing temperatur­es has spoken about how dreams of a warm bed and her parents kept her alive.

Joohee Han, 25, shared her tale of survival after she fell into a deep ravine while taking photograph­s from a mountainto­p south of Cairns in northern Queensland state.

Rescuers had said her chances of staying alive in the rugged terrain, where temperatur­es dropped to 9C (48F), had been “near zero”.

She disappeare­d on 1 June after telling friends she was going to climb Mount Tyson, but was only reported missing on Wednesday, with rescuers eventually finding her on Thursday.

Han told the Australian Broadcasti­ng Corporatio­n on Saturday she was knocked unconsciou­s for several hours after falling, and woke up at night on the side of a steep slope.

“I pretty much didn’t move from where I fell from because it was so steep. Even putting a foot wrong

would’ve been instant death,” she said. “It still makes me teary thinking about that, thinking, ‘am I going to die?’ But there was so much I still wanted to do, food I wanted to eat, and people I wanted to see again. I thought of my parents so much.”

Despite the fall from what she thought was about three storeys high, Han sustained only a broken tooth, bruises and cuts.

She said: “I just craved the stuff I normally ate, mee goreng, cereal, bananas. I thought so much about the things I wanted to do when I got out of here and stepped on solid ground, but then I’d get sad again because I knew I could only do those things if I stayed alive: they were things I couldn’t do if I died.”

Han was eventually able to make it to a ledge near a waterfall, where she drank water and screamed for help until a nearby hiker heard her and alerted police.

On her rescue, she said: “I didn’t realise how happy I could be just standing on the ground until then.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia