Man who was supposed to join fatal weekend hike recalls 5 lost friends - Action News
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British Columbia

Man who was supposed to join fatal weekend hike recalls 5 lost friends

Five people died on Mount Harvey, near Lions Bay, over the weekend. a member of their hiking group remembers the friends he lost that day.

Fundraising effort underway to pay for funeral expenses

Y.C. Kim believes it's no one's fault his friends died when an overhanging mass of snow gave way at the summit of Mount Harvey. (Errol Richardson/CBC)

Y.C. Kim was supposed to be on a Saturday hike that ended in the deaths of five of his friends near Lions Bay.

But at the last minute, he cancelled.

"I packed my bag, prepared my lunch, and then I looked outside, and it was pouring rain," he said. "I was exhausted. I decided not to go."

Hours later, another member of the hiking group called with the tragic news: their friends were missing.

"We were praying and hoping they could make it," he said.

On Sunday, the bodies of his five friends were found by rescuers.

"Everyone is in shock. Not just their families but the Korean community as well."

No one's fault

Kim says the youngest of the hikers was 40-year-old Jay Choi.

40-year-old Jay Choi was making plans to hike Mount Assiniboine and Lake O'Hara on the B.C./Alberta in June. (Y.C. Kim)

He worked as a nanny while supporting his wife and six-year-old and 10-year-old children in Korea.

"He always missed his kids. He always said, 'I can't wait to take my kids to the mountains in B.C.,'" Kim said.

The others who didn't survive the hike were Kay Chung, 66; Ruth Kim, 66; YongJun Sohn, 56 and Iris Cho, 50

Hiker Iris Cho was a nurse from Langley. (Y.C. Kim )

They were all Korean immigrants who had lived in Canada for decades, he said.

All liked to go by their hiking nicknames, said Kim.

The leader of the pack Kay Chung was "The Walking GPS" and Yong Jun Sohn was "Chinook."

Kim doesn't believe there was anything the hikers, who he considered experienced, did wrong on the summit.

"Anyone standing on the summit wouldn't have been able to figure out what they are standing on and what's underneath the surface," he said.

Kim is working on a GoFundMe.comfundraising campaign to pay for the funeral of his friend from Korea, whose family, he says, is not well-off as well as to help the families of the other victims.

Any money left over after funeral expenses will be donated to volunteer search and rescue teams.

Hikers who died snowshoeing are identified as Yong Jun Sohn in green, Kay Chung in orange and Ruth Kim in red. Eric Park, the man in blue, survived. (Y.C. Kim )