Editor's note: In late July, Melody Braden
and Ray Sayers were reported missing after
having failed to return home after a day hike in
the Pyramid Lakes area. The full force of the
Boundary County rescue apparatus was called out
to find them, Sheriff's Office, Sheriff's Posse,
Search and Dive Rescue, but it was a trio of
friends, turned away from the main search area
and told to go home and let the experts do the
work, who, on a gut feeling, stopped and became
the ones to find their friends.
By Molly Rivkin
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A good friend
of Melody Braden, Molly Rivken rode and
hiked and climbed to help in the search
... and just happened to finbe at the
right place at the right time. |
My Mom and I were having a cup of coffee in the
kitchen when we found out Melody Braden and Ray
Sayers had not returned home after short hike
the day before. We learned that Search and
Rescue, family members, and friends were already
searching. My Mom immediately called Alicia
Braden, Melody's Mom and a long time family
friend, to offer our support.
Alicia invited me to join a
search team made up of their friend Jim "Corn
Man" Cadnum, and neighbor Bob Parker.
Memories of kick the can at
night, long games of RISK, afternoons of
swimming, and sleepovers with the Braden kids
motivated me to go. When I arrived at the
Braden's home, Alicia greeted me, telling me
that a helicopter was scheduled to search, and a
long list of family and friends were already
looking. I hopped into the truck with Jim and
Bob, meeting them both for the first time. We
drove out to the Trout Creek road to find the
Deputy Sheriff had closed the road and would not
let us pass.
We turned home all feeling
disappointed. After a couple of minutes Bob
spoke up, saying he did not feel right about
just heading home, because he has a daughter
too, after all. Jim and I agreed wholeheartedly.
We looked at the map and
decided to search Ball Creek drainage instead.
We ran into two fellows on four wheelers as we
bumped along the dusty, winding mountain road.
They told us they had driven up to the end of
the road and hollered for a bit. They doubted
the truck could make it all the way.
They were right. We parked
when the road disappeared into alder brush. From
there we planned to hike to the end of the road,
and then to Ball Lake, hoping to run into other
searchers. None of us really expected to find
Ray and Melody, but we had to try.
Our pace was brisk on the
over grown road, but slowed to a near crawl when
we turned up the mountainside.
We did not have a clear
plan in mind, really. A lot of the time we were
in yelling distance from one another, but were
too far away to see each other. For about an
hour and a half we bumbled up the mountainside
yelling every so often, and meeting up now and
then to discuss our next move.
The afternoon was
stunningly beautiful. Jim checked the map every
so often in order to chart our progress. We
wondered why we could not hear the helicopter,
and thought they must have been found, but
decided to search until dark anyway.
Then, after an intense
session of yelling, we stood quietly and
listened.
We heard a voice, and
excitedly confirmed it among ourselves that we
had all heard it, then took off bounding through
the forest and over a creek in pursuit of the
noise.
We stopped to yell and
listen again, but heard nothing. Bob wanted to
hike up, Jim wanted to find others to comb the
area, and I wanted to go back to the place we'd
heard them before.
Not really knowing what to
do, we yelled again and listened.
We heard a faint voice
again and charged off toward it.
The voice became clearer
and clearer, and soon Ray and Melody popped up
out of the woods. Their faces were red with
sunburn and glowing with relief!
Jim, Bob, and I overwhelmed
them with food, water, and excitement. After
they'd had something to eat, we started
scrambling back down the mountainside. In our
excitement we tried to go too fast, forgetting
that Ray and Melody were exhausted after a cold,
sleepless and fearful night on the mountainside.
We slowed to accommodate
the survivors, and soon we reached the overgrown
road. After about ten minutes hiking down it, we
got flustered and thought we were on the wrong
road, checked the map, went off road for about
five minutes, realized our mistake, and got back
on track, ending up at the truck.
I am not a professional,
and actually have no experience in the search
and rescue field, so my first instinct was to
contact Melody's family. I was not able to get
through because of the amount of phone calls the
Braden household was receiving from concerned
members of the community.
I called my Mom and asked
her to keep trying Alicia. Soon, I got a call
from my stepfather, telling me I should call the
Sheriff's Office and let them know we had found
Melody and Ray, and so I did.
The dispatcher asked us to
stay where we were, which was at the bottom of
the Trout Creek road.
Then Melody's family
arrived and had a tearful and joyful reunion.
Meanwhile, a very nice border patroller showed
up offering medical attention and blankets. He
confirmed Ray and Melody's identity, while
friends and family members stood by. When he
left we all proceeded back to the Braden's
house, where dinner was waiting.
The feeling that sticks out
to me most after such an unusual adventure is
appreciation for this wonderful community.
So many people came
together, volunteered, went out on search
parties, answered phones and spent time with
Alicia preparing food for the searchers.
I am grateful to be from a
community where people rise to the occasion and
offer help to a family in crisis. As for Bob,
Jim, and me being the rescuers...I'm going to
chalk that up to dumb luck.
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