Crater Lake National Park News
Crater Lake Institute - www.craterlakeinstitute.com
Missing boy faces snow, wind
Mail Tribune
Medford, Oregon
October 17, 2006
By ANITA BURKE
Search presses on for 8-year-old from Portland lost at Crater
Lake Saturday
More than 170 searchers from teams across the region braved
wintry conditions Monday to continue looking for an 8-year-old
boy who got separated from his father Saturday at Crater Lake
National Park.
Snow that started falling Sunday afternoon had piled up to
between 6 inches and a foot and a half throughout the park by
Monday afternoon, said Michael Justin, a National Park Service
concession management specialist serving as spokesman.
Falling snow and winds up to 35 mph grounded search helicopters
and made searches from horseback unsafe as the severe weather
closed the park's north entrance and Rim Drive to the public, he
said.
Search-and-rescue teams from Jackson, Klamath and Deschutes
counties and local U.S. Forest Service and Bureau of Land
Management employees joined National Park Service search experts
from California, Washington and Oregon, including specialty
rescue teams from Mount Hood and Mount Rainier. In all, 174
searchers were at the park by Monday evening, Justin said.
They combed an area stretching about a mile from where Samuel
"Sammie" Boehlke slipped away from his father, Ken Boehlke, at
about 4 p.m. Saturday.
The Boehlkes, who live in the Portland area, were staying at
Diamond Lake and had come to Crater Lake for the day. They had
stopped at a pullout about 500 yards east of the Cleetwood Cove
parking lot and were walking on the north side of Rim Drive,
away from the lake, when Sammie ran into the woods, Justin said.
Ken Boehlke searched the pumice slopes and forested area for
nearly two hours before returning to the roadway to flag down a
motorist to call for help, Justin said. Rangers started their
search at about 6 p.m. and the Jackson County search team
brought dogs to track the boy. The dogs initially found a scent,
but didn't locate the boy, authorities said.
Sammie is 4 feet, 11 inches tall, weighs about 85 pounds and has
brown eyes and short brown hair. He was last seen wearing a
long-sleeved, black-and-green- striped T-shirt, tan cargo pants,
a blue winter coat and red, suede slip-on shoes with rubber
soles. Searchers said Sammie is autistic and fearful.
Overnight lows were predicted to dip to around 24 degrees, but
the weather forecast calls for a decreasing chance of
precipitation today and less wind.
"We hope to see clearing for the helicopters to work," Justin
said.
Anyone who saw Sammie Saturday or since then is asked to call
the park's dispatch center at 541-594-3060.
Reach reporter Anita Burke at 776-4485, or e-mail aburke@mailtribune.com