Snowmobiler found safe after spending entire stormy night outdoors - Action News
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New Brunswick

Snowmobiler found safe after spending entire stormy night outdoors

A 24-year-old snowmobiler who disappeared near Bathurst as more than 40 centimetres of snow fell was found safe and sound Friday morning after spending the entire night outdoors.

24-year-old visiting his mother on Acadian Peninsula hadn't been heard from since 8 p.m. Thursday

Denis Leger found missing snowmobiler Pier Alexandre Desilet Hach, 24, at Salmon Beach on Friday at mid-morning. (Denis Leger/Facebook)

A 24-year-old snowmobiler who disappeared near Bathurst as more than 40 centimetres of snow fell was found safe and sound Friday morning after spending the entire night outdoors.

Pier-Alexandre Hach Dsilets, who was visiting from Quebec, survived the night without frostbite with the help of a heated helmet and warm gear he'd just bought in Bathurst, said his mother, Francyne Hach.

Atmid-morningFriday, volunteer searcher Denis Leger foundDsiletsin Salmon Beach, about 10 kilometres northeast of Bathurst on the Bay of Chaleur.

"Everthing is fine,"Hach said.

Hach said her son is currently at a camp, warming up and drying off his gear.

"It's not like he was staying in a five-star,"she said.

Volunter rescue searchers on snowmobiles give the thumbs-up after finding Hach, who had been missing overnight during a storm that dropped more than 40 centimetres of snow on the Bathurst area. (Denis Leger/Facebook)

Dsiletswas in touch with a friend via cellphone until about8 p.m., when communication stopped, his mother said.

By 2 a.m., Bathursthad received 43 centimetres of snow during the major storm that hit the province Thursday and into Friday, Environment Canada said.

His mother said Dsiletshad gone toBathurstearlier in the day because he wanted to have his Yamaha snowmobile checked.

"I told him not to go," she said, because he didn't know the area well and the storm was coming.

Dsiletsmade it to Bathurst, then left around 1:30 p.m., heading for the area of Trudel and Saint-Amateur on the Acadian Peninsula. His mother lives in nearbyBurnsville, and he's been visiting her for the past two weeks.

The snowmobile of Pier-Alexandre Hach Dsilets got bogged down in the snow overnight during a major winter storm. (Denis Leger/Facebook)

Dsiletsnever reached his destination.

His mother said the last piece of information her son sent out before his phone died was about a sign he saw, "St-Isidore / Grande-Anse."

Hachsaid she lit a candle for her son andher prayers were answered. She is thankful for everyone who helped with the search and spread the word on social media.

Firefighters, police, family friends and community members began a search for him Friday morning.

Corrections

  • An earlier version of this story transposed parts of the snowmobiler's name. His name is Pier-Alexandre Hach Dsilets.
    Jan 05, 2018 12:55 PM AT

With files from Hlose Bargain & Louis Mills