It was Karen Wrightѻýs idea to see if the missing teen could be spotted from the air.
The Chilliwack resident said she learned about the search for JJ, 19, who needed his anti-seizure medications, from a Fairfield Island Facebook page on Sunday (Aug. 29).
Wright thought sheѻýd just take a drive and look around.
Then she had a better idea.
Her husband, John Faulkner, chief pilot for Librico Helicopters, was about to head out to Stave Lake to pick up a crew of passengers. What about asking his crew to keep an eye out on the return flight to Chilliwack, since heѻýd have the extra sets of eyes aboard?
So thatѻýs what they did.
On the way back home, Faulkner flew over the Fairfield Island neighbourhood of Chilliwack with the plan to search in a grid pattern around the Bell Road farm that JJ had wandered away from either the night before, or early Sunday.
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ѻýIt was like looking for a needle in a haystack,ѻý Faulkner said. ѻýThe chances are always slim that weѻýll find someone this way.ѻý
He orbited as low as possible and swept the area for 15 to 20 minutes. This was on the heels of two hours of extensive RCMP searches, with a police service dog and a helicopter, which did not turn up any sign of JJ.
All of sudden one of the helicopter passengers saw him.
A big clue theyѻýd found the right person was that the figure among some abandoned machinery wasnѻýt wearing any shoes. He also had the same hair colour described in the missing person report.
ѻýWe felt strongly that we had found him,ѻý Faulkner said. The pilot wanted to be extra careful not to spook JJ by landing near him, but instead hovered nearby.
He scooted back to the farm. The passengers tried motioning to the searchers gathered below in the driveway, to show them where they had just spotted JJ.
They were waving to the spot where they saw him, about 350 metres from home, on the back acreage of a neighbouring property to the north.
From above, they could see two searchers walking toward JJ along a path, the ѻýangelsѻý as his mom later described them as they walked him home.
The helicopter hovered for about 10 minutes, hoping it would nudge JJ, who is non-verbal, toward the searchers.
ѻýThe strategy worked out perfectly,ѻý Faulkner said.
It all came together in terms of timing, and the community wanting to help.
ѻýFacebook always gets a bad rap but this was a prime example of how having the Fairfield Island community page really paid off,ѻý he said.
They called the sighting of the missing person into the non-emergency number of the local RCMP to no avail, and later Wright texted the manѻýs mother: ѻýI believe my husband just found your son.ѻý
Itѻýs ѻýamazingѻý that they spotted him, Wright said, adding:
ѻýItѻýs just a really happy way to end the story.ѻý
Anna Bonde, JJѻýs mother, said her boy had been gone for 20 agonizing hours, and their family is ѻývery thankfulѻý for the community and for their Fairfield neighbours who heeded the call for help.
ѻýTo see him walking back home was such a miracle,ѻý she said. ѻýI could hardly believe it was true.
ѻýWe all went running toward him.ѻý
JJ was covered in scratches from blackberry brambles but otherwise safe.
He hadnѻýt taken meds or eaten anything in the hours since his mama found the door to their home wide open that morning at 6:30 a.m.
JJ was finally escorted home by a man and a woman.
ѻýI called them the two angels,ѻý Bonde said.
It was a good feeling to finally set eyes on her son.
ѻýI want to give God the most glory for answering prayers, and the community for being unbelievably helpful, which I had never experienced before,ѻý Bonde said.
ѻýWithout the selfless help of volunteers, and above all prayers that were prayed and answered above my expectations, this story could have had such a different ending.ѻý
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