JOINT BASE ELMENDORF-RICHARDSON, Alaska — Soldiers with the Alaska Army National Guard’s 207th Aviation Battalion provided aerial assistance for the past two days to help in the search for an overdue snowmachiner on his way from Eek to Quinhagak.
According to the Alaska Rescue Coordination Center, the individual departed on snow machine shortly after 7 p.m. Saturday, March 23, headed south for the approximately 30-mile trek.
The Alaska State Troopers contacted the RCC Sunday to request aviation support to assist with a search that was already underway. Several search and rescue community volunteers formed search parties and explored the routes between both villages, said Capt. Andrew Adams, the Black Hawk pilot on today’s mission and commander of the Army Aviation Operating Facility in Bethel.
“We flew about four hours each, yesterday and today,” said Adams. “We flew all throughout the coastal trail area and the inland route,” he said.
Adams said the weather hasn’t been a limiting factor, it was overcast, but visibility was unrestricted. The terrain is tundra, relatively flat and not mountainous, with most of the snow melted and rivers and lakes thawed or thawing.
“Most trails aren’t even snow covered, so it doesn’t really leave a trail to follow,” said Adams. “It’s really hard to decipher whether tracks are fresh or not, and we don’t have the advantage of a clearly defined trail, which occurs when the ground is covered in snow,” he said.
Adams said that the missing snowmachiner was reported to have been wearing camouflaged rain gear and traveling on a blue snowmachine.