Helena Byler, 78, was found lying on the road October 2 by a rancher who happened to be checking on his cattle in the area of the Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument, Kane County Chief Deputy Alan Alldredge said. She was confused and severely dehydrated.
Search and rescue teams aboard a helicopter found her husband, Gerald Byler, 76, later that day in a trailer he took shelter in after spotting an SOS sign made out of rocks and flowers that was nearby. He was severely dehydrated and unable to move, but could speak with rescuers.
The couple from Houston may not have survived one more day in the extremely remote area with no cellphone coverage where it's normal to go a full week without any cars using the road, Alldredge said. They had hardly any food or water, drinking only from puddles that formed in the ground after rains.
"It's an amazing story," Alldredge said.
The dirt road that winds through a small canyon has large rocks and 18-inch drops at some points, Alldredge said. The couple turned around when they realized they were on the wrong road, but they couldn't get out.
Helena Byler said yesterday in an interview at the hospital that she sensed they were on the wrong road, but that her husband insisted on continuing, KSL-TV reports.
After popping a tire and getting stuck, they realized the GPS app was leading them to Lake Powell trail, not the lake, Helena Byler said. They started walking back on the road and spent the first night in the open as it rained and lightning struck nearby, she said.
The next morning, Gerald Byler couldn't go on, his leg hurting too much, so she set out to get help.
"We had to do something about it, so when the GPS said 16 miles, I said, 'I can do 16 miles," Helena Byler said. "I guessed I would do what I saw on the History Channel, drinking your own urine."
She told rescuers that she had talked to dispatchers on the phone, saw a helicopter coming to rescue her husband and was in granite building and talking to other people, all of which authorities believe were hallucinations triggered by her lack of food and water.
Investigators believe she may have even spent a couple of days in a trailer nearby the one her husband was found in without knowing he was nearby.
Gerald Byler said there was no heat or water in the trailer, but that he was protected from the wind. He said he hung his towel on the side of the fence in hopes that would let someone know he needed help because he has heard people told to do that in the Houston floods.
The best route to Lake Powell from Kanab is on established highways, but it's not the first time tourists have gotten stuck on treacherous dirt roads that their GPS mapping apps thought would be shortcuts, Alldredge said.
He said his agency frequently rescues tourists stuck on dirt roads.
"GPS apps are great. But out here in rural Utah, they sometimes get you in trouble," Alldredge said.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content
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