Cat Lake Canadian Rangers First Rescue a Success

Canadian Rangers Report

3558
Sergeant Charles Wesley receives his rank insignia from Brigadier-General Jocelyn Paul, commander of the Canadian Army's 4th Canadian Division, at the opening of the new Cat Lake Canadian Ranger patrol in February.
Sergeant Charles Wesley receives his rank insignia from Brigadier-General Jocelyn Paul, commander of the Canadian Army's 4th Canadian Division, at the opening of the new Cat Lake Canadian Ranger patrol in February.

CAT LAKE FN – The rescue of a stranded family party of eight whose snowmobiles went through lake ice is “proof that the rescue system works,” according to the Canadian Army officer commanding the Canadian Rangers in the Far North of Ontario.

A Ranger rescue party from Cat Lake First Nation reached the stranded eight as a Royal Canadian Air Force search aircraft circled overhead dropping flares and with a search and rescue technician ready to parachute down to provide help.

“Cat Lake are a brand new Ranger patrol,” said Lieutenant-Colonel Matthew Richardson. “That’s absolutely awesome. That RCAF Hercules search aircraft and the Ranger patrol reaching the stranded party is a great example of the support the Rangers receive from the Canadian Armed Forces. The Rangers really are an indispensable community asset.”

Cat Lake is an isolated Ojibway community of about 500 people located 415 kilometers north of Thunder Bay. Its new Ranger patrol opened in February. There are Rangers in 26 other First Nations in Northern Ontario. Rangers are part-time army reservists.

“It was a family of eight – four adults, a youth, and three younger ones – who were travelling back to Cat Lake last night from their trap line,” said Sergeant Charles Wesley, commander of the Cat Lake Ranger patrol. “They were travelling on lake ice and their snowmobiles went through the ice. The first one managed to make it to shore. The person on it probably got wet feet. Everyone else went into the water and got soaked. They were travelling in the dark and they probably couldn’t tell if it was open water or slush on the lake.

“They got to shore and got a fire going. They had some food, an axe, a chain saw. They were travelling with all the essentials for survival.’

They used a satellite phone to call Cat Lake, 30 kilometres from them, for help. 

The manager of the community’s Northern store opened it at 11 pm. to provide food and rescue supplies to the Rangers who organized a rescue team. The team consisted of Sergeant Wesley, Ranger Lavern Wesley, and three civilian volunteers, Abraham Keesickquayash, Alvin
Quequish, and Chad Wesley.  They left Cat Lake at 4 am. on snowmobiles in the dark and in foggy conditions that forced them to halt part way for safer conditions in daylight. They had to be able to see the lake ice so that they did not go through the ice themselves.

As they approached the stranded party around 6 am they saw the RCAF plane circling above and dropping flares. The search plane had sighted the stranded party’s fire and dropped a phone so they could communicate. 

“We used the phone they had dropped to talk to the aircrew right away.” Sergeant Wesley said. “We told them everyone was all right and they left. We got the two snowmobiles that had gone through the ice to shore where they will be recovered later. We brought everyone back to Cat Lake on the back of our snowmobiles and in our sleds.

“We’ve completed our first rescue as Rangers. That’s a good feeling.”


(Sergeant Peter Moon is the public affairs ranger for the 3rd Canadian Ranger Patrol Group at Canadian Forces Base Borden.)

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Sgt. Peter Moon
Sergeant Peter Moon is the public affairs ranger for the 3rd Canadian Ranger Patrol Group. Canadian Rangers are army reservists who provide a military presence in Canada's remote and isolated regions, including Northern Ontario. They provide skilled assistance in emergencies such as searches, plane crashes, forest fires, and floods. They also operate the Junior Canadian Rangers, a youth programme for boys and girls aged 12 to 18.