January 11, 2025
Lost Melbourne hiker Hadi Nazari most likely found life-saving refuge in a secluded mountain hut known as the Opera House, well-placed sources have revealed.
citynews.com.au
''They were built to last but not immune to unforgiving surrounds, with the 2019-20 Black Summer bushfires claiming dozens of culturally-significant dwellings including the last remaining complete quintessential miner’s hut on the old Kiandra goldfields, Four Mile Hut.
Rough terrain at the park has been at the centre of a political fight in recent years over a cull of wild brumbies and is known for its danger, with search and rescue operations not uncommon.
Canadian hiker Prabhdeep Srawn went missing there in 2013 while skier Stephen Crean, brother of former federal cabinet minister Simon Crean, disappeared in 1985 before his remains were found 18 months later.''
Vanished hikers. Disappearing backpackers. Missing children. Are these mysteries in the great outdoors due to accidents, mistakes and bad luck, or evidence of something more sinister?
www.mapquest.com
By: Alia Hoyt & Becky Striepe | Updated: Oct 25, 2024 Huge article.
4: Prabhdeep Srawn, 2013
A summertime view of Mount Kosciuszko, Australia's highest peak. © Ashley Cooper/Corbis
Prabhdeep Srawn was a 25-year-old Canadian army reservist who disappeared from Australia's Kosciuszko National Park, located in the southeastern state of
New South Wales. Srawn was studying abroad in Australia in May 2013, when he decided to take a 1,700 mile- (2,700 kilometer-) road trip from the Gold Coast to Melbourne. Srawn rented a van, drove to the park's Charlotte Pass in the Snowy Mountains, and no one has seen him since [source:
French].
The search for Srawn began when the rental company discovered that the van wasn't returned. Srawn hadn't told anyone what route or side hikes he was planning, and the search may have started days or even a week after he went missing, since it was the rental company that first reported the disappearance. Searchers figured out his hike plans by looking at the search history on a laptop they recovered from his van [source:
Mcllroy].
Srawn's family hired private searchers after Australian authorities called off their search after only two weeks. The investigators used tower data from Srawn's phone and a trained dog to track his trail to a treacherous area called the Western Fall Wilderness [source:
French]. Just one day before his van was due back to the rental agency, Srawn embarked on a difficult and time-consuming hike in snowy weather. Why would a trained military reservist make a choice like that? Despite a private search that went on for over a year, Srawn's body has never been recovered.''