Her son was napping in the family van. Then he vanished into the B.C. wilderness for 32 hours

4-year-old George Hazard-Benoit disappeared from the family van Saturday, prompting massive search effort.

prompt (v) cause sth to happen.


It was supposed to be a fun day spent picking berries in the woods.
+ woods (n) an area of trees, smaller than a forest
E.g: a walk in the woods

Instead, the weekend became a nightmare for Tykao Hazard and Kris Benoit, whose 4-year-old son George wandered out of the family van and vanished into the woods near Mackenzie, B.C., about 180 kilometres north of Prince George, for a harrowing 32 hours.
+ harrowing (adj) very shocking or frightening and making you feel very upset
E.g: a harrowing experience

On Saturday, Hazard and a friend drove to the berry picking spot, a place she'd been visiting since she was a little girl.

It was drizzling outside when they arrived at around 12:30 p.m. and George, dressed in a long-sleeved shirt, sweatpants, runners and a rainproof coat, was groggy — more interested in napping than picking.

+ drizzle (v) mưa phùn, mưa bụi
+ sweetpants (n) Image result for sweatpants
+ groggy (adj) weak and unable to think or move well because you are ill/ sick or very tired
E.g: the sleeping pills left her feeling very groggy.

So Hazard moved him to the floor of the van, where he could sleep more comfortably, and told him to "come find us when he woke up." After all, they'd be just a few metres away from the van, well within view.

Just 10 minutes later, Hazard's friend went to the van to check on the sleeping boy.

He was gone.

Hazard headed down one path, her friend down another.

"I was just thinking, I have to find him," she said tearfully over the phone on Monday.
+ tearful (adj) - đẫm nước mắt. E.g: a tearful face


Panic sets in (set in = begin and seem likely to continue)

The area they were searching is beyond a turn to Lions Lake Campground, and past some train tracks. The trees and low bushes are dense, thick with blueberries.

Five minutes later, panic began to set in. Hazard phoned her father. The next call was to 911.


George said he stayed awake most of the night, eating blueberries. (Submitted by Tykao Hazard)

Over the next few hours, RCMP, conservation officers, search and rescue teams, and hundreds of volunteers began combing the area. Dogs sniffed the van seats to pick up George's scent.

His name was called over loudspeakers and officers roamed the area on quad bikes.

+ quad bike (n) a motorcycle with four large wheels, used for riding over rough ground

Hearing voices

Hazard was told to stay near the van where she and her friend were certain they heard George's voice.

"I was damn sure I heard him say 'Mom' once, very clear," she said.

"But [my friend] was trying to keep it in our minds [that] it could be our brains playing tricks on us because there were a few times we thought we heard him and we both ran into the woods calling for him."

At one point, a train roared by.

"I knew he loved he loved trains, I kept yelling at him to go towards the sound of the train," she said.

A couple hours into the search, Hazard made the phone call she'd dreaded the most: to George's father Kris, from whom she is separated.
+ dread (v) to be very afraid of sth, fear that sth bad is going to happen
E.g: This was the moment he had been dreading.

"I didn't know how to tell him that I lost our child," she said.

As Saturday evening stretched into Saturday night, RCMP began telling volunteers to head home for the night.

'[That] almost sent me into a panic until someone assured me they were going to keep looking all night," said Hazard.

'My legs buckled'

Hazard said she slept a fitful hour or two. It rained almost all night. 

fitful (adj) từng cơn, từng đợt
E.g: a fiftul wind/ cough

By noon the next day, George had been missing for 24 hours. Hazard was told the chances her son was still alive had diminished significantly in that time.

Finally, on Sunday, some hope — one of the searchers found a child's footprints near the train tracks. A professional tracker was brought in and determined the tracks had been made at some point on Saturday night.

"When all hope felt lost, someone came and told me they were definitely George's tracks," said Hazard.

Then finally, just before 8 p.m. on Sunday night, Hazard was called over to the main search and rescue trailer.

"I think the only thing that registered in my mind from what they said was 'he was found alive,' " she said.

"My legs buckled."


Several search and rescue teams, as well as a hundred volunteers, combed the woods for the child in the pouring rain. (Tamara Wiese)

George was found by the shores of Williston Lake, cold, wet and exhausted, but unhurt.

The boy was plucked out of the B.C. wilderness via helicopter and transported directly to the hospital in Mackenzie.
+ Pluck (v) remove sb from a place/ situation, especially one that is unpleasant or dangerous.
E.g: plucked to safety by a helicopter
+ wilderness (n) a large area of land that has never been developed or used

He said he spent most of the night awake, eating blueberries. He'd heard his mother telling him to head towards the sounds of the train.

When he got lost and heard strangers calling for him, he got scared and hid.

"He is doing amazing, he was cold, but he warmed up very fast. He wasn't crying when I met him at the hospital," said Hazard.

Hazard said she regrets leaving George in the van, and that she'll do things differently in the future. But she said countless friends have told her not to dwell on it, that it happens to every parent.
+ dwell on/ upon sth: think or talk a lot about sth, especially sth it would be better to forget
E.g: so you made a mistake, but there's no need to dwell on it

Asked why he left the van and headed into the woods, George said he went to help pick berries, as his mother had told him. 

"He was trying to find me."

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