Yeah, time to build a big fire, roast up some moose kebabs, throw the skin on the ground and build a lean to over it, place rocks on other side of the fire to reflect the heat, and go to sleep with a full belly of moose! 
You're joking, right?
I go with friends hunting west of Edmonton into the foothills and can't get a cell signal half the time.
I don't see Gros Morne being a hot bed of cell towers.
SPOT or a PLB would be a better bet if you want a lifeline.
Awesome tale but I am tryng to figure out why the fellow was so weak after only one night in the bush was he in really bad shape or was he packing out the moose?
I think the moral of the story is how guns can save lives!
They heard the gun shots, fired to catch their attention and fired back in response. Left to their weakened states and tired cold lungs... they were saved.
Theres a positive spin.

He said hope that they would find their way home safely was fading when they heard gunshots in the distance.
Joyce said he fired back in reply.
The shots were from searchers who lit a fire in hopes the lost couple would spot the smoke.
......................
“We really, really appreciate the effort that was put into ... well, preserving us from perishing in the woods.”
Awesome tale but I am tryng to figure out why the fellow was so weak after only one night in the bush was he in really bad shape or was he packing out the moose?
Awesome tale but I am tryng to figure out why the fellow was so weak after only one night in the bush was he in really bad shape or was he packing out the moose?
Tons of..., hills and valleys, wild temp changes, fast weather changes.
Im not saying that a one night ordeal should be a hardship on an average man. But an old man, or someone without the right gear could have one HELL of a miserable night. Could really take its toll on the old man.
Didn't drink his own pee. He would have been much better able to deal with the rigours of the outdoors has he drank his own pee.
Glad it all worked out for them.
I think they did well, anyone that has been in the woods much knows you cant prepare for everything.It is easy to get turned around if it is snowing or no sun shining and sometimes a compass is very hard to believe if you think your going the right way.Good for them.
You sir, sound like a statistic waiting to happen! Don't mean to come down on you but I think you need a little training in outdoorsmanship before you come up with comments like this. Thanks for the laugh!!!!!!!
Happy hunting!
As a former search and rescue member I have seen incidents where someone with a compass has been found and when asked what happened, they had panicked and were positive the compass was wrong.That is the point I was trying to make.Also after following a lost persons tracks and picking up his shoes, socks, and eventually a jacket the poor guy was found six or seven hundred yards from safety at a well lit cabin(panic again).He didnt make it.That is one statistic I would like to forget.Happy Hunting.



























