Cape Breton Post

B.C. man says no tracks beyond mountain edge meant 5 hikers had fallen to deaths

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A hiker says he was shocked when he realized he was standing near a ledge where five people had just fallen to their deaths in the mountains near Vancouver.

Alastair Ferries said he had just passed a man on Saturday who mentioned his five friends were ahead of him on Mount Harvey, about 35 kilometres north of the city.

“I got to the summit and there was nobody there,” he said in an interview Monday. “There were some tracks leading over to the edge and it looked like it had broken off there.”

Ferris, 62, said that’s when he knew the entire group had fallen when a cornice, or snow ledge, had fallen from under them. Searchers found the bodies on Sunday, 500 metres below the mountain’s summit.

When the hiker he had just passed joined him, Ferris said the man’s demeanour immediatel­y changed.

“I could see the astonishme­nt on his face. That verified to me that yeah, there actually were five people and they had fallen. I said, ‘I’m sorry, I think your friends have fallen.’”

Ferries of North Vancouver said he went to his vehicle to call for help.

Lions Bay Mayor Karl Buhr

said he believes the hikers were from nearby Maple Ridge and were experience­d, but they were not carrying avalanche beacons, making it harder to find them.

“They didn’t do anything wrong,” he said. “They were just at the wrong place at the wrong time.”

At least 60 search and rescue members volunteere­d their time to search with dogs for those who had fallen, Buhr said.

“It was a very big incident and the response was amazing. I’ve never seen people looking more tired.”

Buhr said recovery teams had to ensure it was safe to go into the mountains because of the potential for avalanches and they worked hard to retrieve the bodies on Sunday so families did not have to wait one more night.

“You need to have the person found and who knew if they could even go up today,” he said on Monday.

The Salvation Army provided food for the recovery teams, Buhr said, adding the massive operation was too much for the town to deal with on its own.

 ?? CP PHOTO ?? Rescue personnel gather at a staging area in Lions Bay, B.C., Sunday. Five bodies have been recovered from the site of a snow slide in the mountains north of Vancouver.
CP PHOTO Rescue personnel gather at a staging area in Lions Bay, B.C., Sunday. Five bodies have been recovered from the site of a snow slide in the mountains north of Vancouver.

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