Sharp is just the most recent hiker authorities have either saved or recovered near the bus 24-year-old Chris McCandless lived, and died, inside in 1992. McCandless lived in the bus for two months while on a mission of self-discovery, before eventually starving to death. Rescuing hikers from the trail is a common occurrence for troopers. Recently, a woman drowned in the Teklanika River that runs not too far from the area the bus sits.
Sharp was injured as he was swept down the Alaskan river after waters rapidly rose. Crossing the river is necessary to get to where the ‘Into The Wild’ bus sits. In an email sent to CBC News Sharp detailed his account of how his journey up the trail almost turned deadly.
“Once I was about halfway across, the current overwhelmed me and dragged me and my [50 pounds of] gear down stream,” Sharp said. “I got pretty beat up. While being dragged, I was able to grab a fallen tree and get to shore.”
Sharp then wrote of the injuries he sustained, and how they began to get more painful as the adrenaline began to subside.
“At this point I started to feel how beat up I was; bruising to my legs, back, shoulders, and ankles,” Sharp said. “By the next morning I was so sore that I was unable to carry my gear, let alone cross the rivers again and hike the 30km out.”
Sharp then had no choice but to turn on his locator — an emergency gadget that alerts authorities of a life and death situation — and wait for help. The distress signal would save his life.
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