A five-year-old boy and his seven-year-old brother were recovering yesterday in an Australian hospital after surviving with their father for 10 days in the wilderness with little food and in weather conditions that ranged from stormy to scorching.
Their ordeal began on Dec. 11 when dad Steven Van Lonkhuyzen took a wrong turn during a family road trip and then got his four-wheel-drive vehicle bogged in mud.
The family was rescued on Sunday after farmer Tom Wagner went searching and found them in the remote Expedition National Park.
“They were pretty hungry by the time I got to them, and pretty happy to see me,” Wagner said.
He said the younger boy, Timothy, kept asking him if he had any eggs, while the older one, Ethan, appeared dehydrated.
He said the father had given the limited food he had to his sons, who themselves had gone with little or nothing to eat for a week.
“Luckily it rained,” he said. “Otherwise they would have perished.”
Queensland Police Acting Superintendent Mick Bianchi said Van Lonkhuyzen had planned to drive from his home in Brisbane to Cairns using an inland route.
“Quite simply, he took a wrong turn,” Bianchi said.
He said the boys were getting their strength back after their ordeal, during which temperatures rose to about 38°C. The boys were both listed as being in a stable condition at the Taroom Hospital.
Bianchi said the family had limited provisions, but luckily it was stormy at times and they were able to collect rainwater in a plastic container. He said the father had tried to attract attention by laying out high visibility items around his vehicle and lighting fires.
He said Van Lonkhuyzen made the right choice by staying with his vehicle.
“They were very trying conditions, and it would have tested the family’s relationship,” Bianchi said.
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