East Bay Times

Couple, dog stranded in blizzard for 2 days with no food, water, Northern California deputies say

- By Ishani Desai

The Nevada County Sheriff's Office rescued three people stranded in heavy snow last week after a weekend blizzard unleashed more than 10 feet of snow in the High Sierra amid billowing gusts topping 100 mph.

The Nevada County Sheriff's Office rescued a couple March 3 whose fourwheele­r broke down outside of Nevada City, deputies said. They had no food, water or cellphone service as they sat for two days in a truck while this season's most severe storm buffeted slopes, deputies said.

A 45-year-old Colfax man, his girlfriend and dog huddled inside their truck until the man hiked to find cellphone service and called 911 just before 8:35 a.m. March 3y. The call dropped more than once, leading dispatcher­s to pinpoint his coordinate­s on a map before finding him near Lowell Road, deputies said.

The Nevada County

Search and Rescue team and a Nevada Irrigation District official — who also worked with the Sheriff's Office — responded to help the couple and their dog by 12:06 p.m.

In the second incident, a snowmobile­r trekked through Johnson Canyon in Truckee on Tuesday in hopes of gliding over the Warren Lake Trail, the Sheriff's Office said. But the man got stuck on the trail about 2 p.m. with a low cellphone battery amid freezing temperatur­es, deputies said.

The 36-year-old man from Nevada had packed a backup cellphone battery, a blanket and water while he awaited rescue.

A party of 26 first-responders — from the Nevada and Placer sheriff's offices and the Tahoe Nordic Search and Rescue team — found the man just before 8 p.m.

The Tahoe Nordic team also had helped retrieve stranded people in two separate incidents on Tuesday, the Sheriff's Office said.

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