Every week, Finn Creaney’s father gets off a train in the north Highlands and hikes into the wilderness.
Mark Creaney walks until his feet can’t take him any further, scanning the land for clues as he goes.
After three or four nights of camping and searching he heads back home to Inverness to recuperate and gather more supplies.
And then he makes the same journey again.
It’s a pattern he has followed almost religiously since the disappearance of his son on March 25, 2022.
And it’s one he’ll keep doing until he finds out what happened. The agony of not knowing
The searches for Finn have covered a huge area, more than 3,500 square miles. And the terrain is rugged and unforgiving.
There are mountains, moors, cliffs, lochs, rocks and bogs.
[...]
“You never feel like you’re doing all you can,” said Mark, 56. “You worry you’ve gone over the wrong ridge, you should be going somewhere else.
“But I would go barmy if I wasn’t doing this. Being proactive and being out there, it calms me down.
“It’s an odd mindset. Every day you don’t find him, it’s a good day.
“But you’re frustrated because you still aren’t getting answers.”
[...]
Mark has put aside his career as a self-employed wood carver to devote himself to the search.
His journey on foot begins each week when he arrives at Kinbrace train station, 86 miles north of Inverness.
The odds of a happy ending to this case lengthen with each passing day, but Finn’s father still believes his son is alive somewhere.
Mark said: “We talk all the time about what could have happened. We’ve asked every question, considered every permutation and still haven’t got to the bottom of it.
“But I get to choose how I feel about it. I know Finn, I know how confident and skilled he is.
“I feel he’s still out there, still alive..."
[...]
Every week, Mark Creaney gets off a train in the north Highlands and hikes into the wilds.
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