How willpower helped teenager survive a plane crash in wilderness
Teenage plane-crash survivor Autumn Veatch says she found the willpower to trek to safety by telling herself 'there's no way I can die without hugging somebody again.'
Newton Goss/AP
The teenaged girl who survived a plane crash in the Washington mountains and spent two nights alone in the woods before finding her way to safety says she tried to pull her step-grandparents from the burning wreckage.
In an interview with NBC News, 16-year-old Autumn Veatch said she burned her hand trying to rescue her step-grandfather Leland Bowman out, but she couldn't save him or his wife Sharon.
The Bowmans were flying Autumn from Montana to Bellingham, Wash., on Saturday with Mr. Leland in control of the small Beechcraft A-35 plane.
Autumn told NBC that before the crash they entered a cloud bank with zero visibility. After that “it was all trees and then it was fire,” with Leland and Sharon trapped in the plane.
She continued that after not being able to help them out, before running for her safety, she told them that she loved them and that “it would be ok.”
“I was just blaming myself because the flight was to take me home and there wasn’t anything I could do,” she said.
Autumn made her way down a steep slope and followed a creek to a river. She then followed the river to a trail and finally to a highway where motorists spotted her Monday and drove her to the nearest store.
The teenager spent two nights alone in the woods.
“I just got this surge of willpower and was like there's no way I can die without hugging somebody again," she said.
After a brief stay in the hospital, Autumn returned home to Bellingham late Tuesday and reunited with friends and family who were waiting for her with balloons and flowers.
Okanogan County Sheriff Frank Rogers told NBC that everyone in the county is “impressed” with Autumn. “She's kinda like a superhero,” he added.
This report includes material from the Associated Press.