Corona woman found after 2 nights in the San Gorgonio Wilderness
The hiker used a cellphone after being separated from a group climbing Mt. San Gorgonio. After a helicopter rescue, she was taken to a hospital for treatment. An Inyo County hiker remains missing.
By Mary Engel
Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
12:53 PM PDT, July 12, 2008
A 21-year-old Corona woman who got lost Thursday while hiking Southern California's highest peak and spent two nights in the San Gorgonio Wilderness was rescued by helicopter this morning after calling 911 on her cellphone.
Grace Hilario was found about 7:30 a.m. and taken to Loma Linda University Medical Center to be treated for dehydration and exposure, according to San Bernardino County Sheriff's Department spokeswoman Jodi Miller.
The San Gorgonio Wilderness is in the San Bernardino Mountains about 75 miles east of Los Angeles.
Early Thursday afternoon, Hilario, whom Miller described as an inexperienced hiker, struck out ahead of a group of friends on the Vivian Creek trail. The rest of the group reached the summit of 11,499-foot Mt. San Gorgonio and returned to the trailhead parking lot around 10:30 p.m. without seeing any sign of her.
The hikers notified the Sheriff's Department around 11 p.m., and by dawn Friday, 30 search-and-rescue volunteers were combing the trails, Miller said.
Late Friday night, Hilario reached the sheriff's dispatcher by calling 911 on her cellphone. But her description of her location was vague, Miller said, and deputies advised her to stay where she was and turn off her phone until morning to conserve the battery. She told deputies that she still had food and water, Miller said.
A helicopter search began at first light, with deputies again in contact with the missing hiker by cellphone. They found her about eight miles southeast of the trailhead parking lot.
"She obviously got disoriented," Miller said. "If you're going to start with a group, you need to start and end that hike together."
Another hiker remained missing in treacherous terrain in Inyo County, where sheriff's officials called off a weeklong search Friday evening. The hiker, Ric DeVan of San Diego, signed a register book at the summit of Mt. Goode on July 4, reporting that he planned to hike next to nearby Mt. Johnson. He was supposed to meet his family at Treasure Lakes late that afternoon, but he never showed up.
Steep drop-offs and unstable terrain make hiking between the two peaks extremely dangerous, sheriff's officials said in a press statement.
Search teams from as far away as Los Angeles and Marin counties had combed the area in what Inyo County Sheriff Bill Lutze called one of the largest ever conducted in his county.
"Search teams gave everything they could to locate Mr. DeVan," Lutze said in the statement. "This is very difficult to reconcile, for everyone involved in the operation."
Officials said any new information about DeVan's whereabouts will be investigated.
mary.engel@latimes.com