Gutsy survivor keeps hunting
Wilderness ordeal fails to deter hunter
By GLENN KAUTH, SUN MEDIA
The Edmonton Sun
A three-day hunting ordeal that left him trapped in a canyon hasn't kept Roy Getson from his favourite pastime.
"It didn't deter me from what I like doing," said the avid hunter from Edson. "If I didn't have to work, that's what I'd be doing."
Despite his bravery, Getson is doing a few things differently since his miraculous rescue from the canyon he slipped into while on a sheep-hunting expedition near Nordegg in late September.
Most importantly, he won't go hunting alone anymore. Last week, for example, while out in the Cadomin area near Hinton, he was with friends.
While he's now recovered from the ordeal, he does suffer a few lingering effects.
"Everything is all cleared up, (but) the cold gets to me now from the hypothermia. As soon as I get outside and it's cold, I'm freezing."
Despite his good health, Getson said he still thinks about his time in the canyon every day. Trapped next to a three-metre-wide creekbed, he only had garlic sausage to eat, which he rationed off over the three days he spent there.
Every night, the creek waters would rise, leaving him soaked. In the meantime, it rained and snowed as temperatures dipped below freezing, all of which left the 25-year-old with hypothermia.
Because of his shivering, Getson said he couldn't sleep at all.
By the second day, his wife Rhonda became worried after he failed to call. She knew something was wrong because, she said, "Roy never gets lost."
On the third day, she, family members and rescue teams were in the Nordegg area, 298 km southwest of Edmonton, looking for Getson.
As Rhonda feared the worst, Getson fired a few remaining bullets from his gun to alert a helicopter flying overhead.
But because he was in such a narrow gap, the helicopter couldn't see him. Getson, though, was smart enough to throw a bright-orange neck warmer to the ledge, which rescuers ended up spotting.
One of them then rappelled down into the canyon to bring him supplies, and by the next day Getson was out and hugging his family.
Despite his harrowing ordeal, just a few weeks later the fearless Getson bagged a moose while out hunting again.
He's been out several times since and he even plans to go back to the Blackstone Gap area near Nordegg where he fell.
"I do plan on going back there next year," he said. "I'll give it another go (but) I'll stay away from my canyon."
Wilderness ordeal fails to deter hunter
By GLENN KAUTH, SUN MEDIA
The Edmonton Sun
A three-day hunting ordeal that left him trapped in a canyon hasn't kept Roy Getson from his favourite pastime.
"It didn't deter me from what I like doing," said the avid hunter from Edson. "If I didn't have to work, that's what I'd be doing."
Despite his bravery, Getson is doing a few things differently since his miraculous rescue from the canyon he slipped into while on a sheep-hunting expedition near Nordegg in late September.
Most importantly, he won't go hunting alone anymore. Last week, for example, while out in the Cadomin area near Hinton, he was with friends.
While he's now recovered from the ordeal, he does suffer a few lingering effects.
"Everything is all cleared up, (but) the cold gets to me now from the hypothermia. As soon as I get outside and it's cold, I'm freezing."
Despite his good health, Getson said he still thinks about his time in the canyon every day. Trapped next to a three-metre-wide creekbed, he only had garlic sausage to eat, which he rationed off over the three days he spent there.
Every night, the creek waters would rise, leaving him soaked. In the meantime, it rained and snowed as temperatures dipped below freezing, all of which left the 25-year-old with hypothermia.
Because of his shivering, Getson said he couldn't sleep at all.
By the second day, his wife Rhonda became worried after he failed to call. She knew something was wrong because, she said, "Roy never gets lost."
On the third day, she, family members and rescue teams were in the Nordegg area, 298 km southwest of Edmonton, looking for Getson.
As Rhonda feared the worst, Getson fired a few remaining bullets from his gun to alert a helicopter flying overhead.
But because he was in such a narrow gap, the helicopter couldn't see him. Getson, though, was smart enough to throw a bright-orange neck warmer to the ledge, which rescuers ended up spotting.
One of them then rappelled down into the canyon to bring him supplies, and by the next day Getson was out and hugging his family.
Despite his harrowing ordeal, just a few weeks later the fearless Getson bagged a moose while out hunting again.
He's been out several times since and he even plans to go back to the Blackstone Gap area near Nordegg where he fell.
"I do plan on going back there next year," he said. "I'll give it another go (but) I'll stay away from my canyon."




















































