Account Login/Registration

Access KelownaNow using your Facebook account, or by entering your information below.


Facebook


OR


Register

Privacy Policy

Missing Canadian woman found after surviving in forest for almost 2 weeks

A New Brunswick woman says she was able to survive in woods northeast of the province for nearly two weeks by drinking rainwater from puddles and eating wild berries.

Jenny McLaughlin, who was rescued Tuesday, said her need to see family and loved ones again gave her the strength to keep going. The Saint−Isidore, NB, woman said she got lost in the woods after dark.

"I survived basically off of rain water and puddle water," she said in an interview Thursday by text message. "Anything I could find basically, and was lucky there were orange wild berries ... to eat around the 4th, 5th day."

"I found shelter in the trees where I could but had no phone or lighter for support or to depend on," she wrote.

McLaughlin was reported missing July 17, triggering an intensive search by the RCMP. The next day, searchers found her vehicle at an ATV trail in Rough Waters, NB, about 220 kilometres north of Moncton. Her cell phone was found in woods last Saturday, but there was no sign of the woman until she was found late Tuesday by linemen doing maintenance for NB Power.

The company posted on Facebook: "Employees were in the process of moving locations with the aid of a helicopter to prepare for the next day’s events. Our employee disembarked off the helicopter and when the helicopter flew away to gather more material our employee could hear a faint cry for help. The quick−thinking lineman immediately called for help and notified the rest of the crew."

RCMP Cpl. Kevin Plourde says the workers from East Coast Powerline deserve a lot of credit.

"Those workers did an outstanding job to stabilize her, to put her on a stretcher and give her first aid," he said Thursday. "It was a really rough terrain, a lot of swamps, a lot of dead wood."

Plourde said the rescuers had to carry her 1.3 kilometres to the closest trail accessible by ambulance. "We had to do it with her on a stretcher and us walking because there was no way to evacuate her by helicopter, or with an ATV because the terrain was too rough," he said.

Plourde said police believe the woman walked in circles for the last few days of her ordeal.

McLaughlin said her time in the woods was frightening and she knew there were wild animals nearby.

"I saw signs of bears yes, the markings and the scrapes on the trees, the droppings ... could sometimes hear them and the coyotes (or fox) not too far.. really scary but had to keep going," she wrote.

She was treated in hospital for her injuries, which include a sunburn and scraped ankles, and is recovering at home.



If you get value from KelownaNow and believe local independent media is important to our community we ask that you please consider subscribing to our daily newsletter.

If you appreciate what we do, we ask that you consider supporting our local independent news platform.


Send your comments, news tips, typos, letter to the editor, photos and videos to news@kelownanow.com.




weather-icon
Thu
13℃

weather-icon
Fri
15℃

weather-icon
Sat
16℃

weather-icon
Sun
15℃

weather-icon
Mon
17℃

weather-icon
Tue
18℃

current feed webcam icon

Recent Livestream




Top Stories

Follow Us

Follow us on Instagram Follow us on Twitter Like us on Facebook Follow us on Linkedin Follow us on Youtube Listen on Soundcloud Follow Our TikTok Feed Follow Our RSS Follow Our pinterest Feed
Follow Our Newsletter
Privacy Policy

Quick Links