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Woman, 47, who vanished in Utah canyon SIX MONTHS ago is found living in flimsy tent and surviving on 'moss and grass'

 

  • On Sunday, Utah County Sheriff's Office found a 47-year-old woman who has been missing since last November alive in a tent while searching for her body with a drone
  • She managed to survive despite the area regularly experiencing freezing temperatures in December and January 
  • She ate supplies left in an abandoned tent she moved into, and also survived on moss as well as grass, with cops saying she was underweight 
  • Around Thanksgiving time last year, deputies searched the area and found an abandoned tent and camping equipment along with identifying information on the 47-year-old woman
  • The Sheriff's office was not able to successfully contact the woman's family and she was never reported missing
  • The woman's co-workers told police they had no idea where she was and described her as 'quiet' and a 'loner'  
  • The Utah County Sheriff's Office will not release the woman's identity because of her suspected mental health issues
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    A woman who vanished six months ago was found living in a flimsy tent in a canyon after a drone searching for her corpse crashed into a nearby tree. 

    The unnamed 47 year-old told Utah County Sheriff's Office deputies that she had moved into the remote Diamond Ford Canyon, near Spanish Fork, voluntarily after being found on Sunday.

    She said she had survived by eating supplies she found in the abandoned tent she moved into, as well as moss and grass, and was severely underweight when she was found. 

    The woman managed to survive temperatures that regularly hovered around freezing during the winter months, and says hikers also provided her with supplies. 

    Sergeant Spencer Cannon, Public Information Officer for the Utah County Sheriff's Office told DailyMail.com how searchers had set off expecting to find the woman's body. 

    The drone search was part of a semi-regular hunt for the missing woman, and resulted in her being found through sheer luck when it crashed into a tree. 

    While recovering the drone, which was operated by a nonprofit group which works with cops to help track missing people, a sergeant and the drone operator saw the woman's tent.  

    The missing woman opened its zipper, and stuck her head out of it.

 

 

Authorities sent out a medical team to the campsite and examined the woman who had lost a significant amount of weight and was weak.

Cannon says that authorities were incredibly impressed with the woman's survival instincts, especially in the harsh winter conditions. 

'She was resilient and manage to survive over the coldest months of the year, sometimes the temperature hits below zero,' he said. 'She's an amazing woman. In my 30 years involved in search and rescue I have never seen anything like this,' Cannon told DailyMail.com 



Her disappearance was flagged up around Thanksgiving 2020, when a U.S. Forest Service official preparing for seasonal canyon closures found the woman's red Sedan in a parking lot near the Dry Canyon Trailhead in Diamond Fork Canyon. 

Deputies searched the area and found an abandoned tent red and gray tent and camping equipment along with items that identified the missing woman. 

The Sheriff's office was not able to successfully contact the woman's family and she was never reported missing. 

Detectives were able to speak to the woman's co-workers who told police they had no idea where she was or planned on staying and described her as 'quiet' and a 'loner.' That led investigators to conclude she had mental health struggles,

 

 

 

The woman told authorities that she was living in a tent a camper abandoned and was found with small amounts of food. 

She told officials she foraged for grass and moss to survive and had access to water from a nearby river. 

Sergeant Cannon told DailyMail.com they will not release the woman's identity because of her suspected mental health issues, and because she has not committed any crime. 

The woman willingly stayed in the area since November and the Sheriff's office says that other than overstaying the Forest Service's camping allowance, the woman did not break any laws. 

Cannon said that the Sheriff Office does not charge people for overstaying on campgrounds, only for making a mess - but that the missing woman had kept her camp site tidy. 

'The camping area was very tidy and well-kept,' he said. 'which is unusual in that regard, criminally speaking there was nothing that would have drawn our attention to her.' 

He said that if in the future she chooses to return to the same area, support will be offered to her to try and ensure she remains in good health.

 

 

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-9542103/Woman-vanished-Utah-canyon-alive-six-months-drone-searching-CORPSE.html