In November of 2020, a 47-year-old woman set out for what many consider a routine hike on the stunning Dry Canyon Trailhead in Diamond Fork Canyon, a little slice of wilderness just outside Salt Lake City, Utah. But as we know, sometimes a simple outdoor excursion can turn into something far more perplexing. Her car was discovered abandoned at a campground, and despite frantic searches that turned up little more than an old tent, hopes began to dwindle. What happened to this woman? It’s the mystery about a woman who seemingly vanished into thin air. Fast forward nearly six months – just when everyone thought the case had gone cold, a crash landing was about to rewrite the narrative. Ever wonder how a drone could play a role in uncovering the impossible? So, grab your magnifying glass and get comfy as we delve into this unfolding enigma, where nature’s beauty collides with human tenacity. LEARN MORE.
In November of 2020, a woman disappeared on the Dry Canyon Trailhead in Diamond Fork Canyon, located about an hour outside Salt Lake City, Utah. Her car was abandoned at a campground, and the Utah County Sheriff’s Office deputies found nothing but an old tent on the trail.
Nearly six months later, a drone crashed and found the impossible.
Located outside of Salt Lake City, Utah, Dry Canyon Trailhead in Diamond Fork Canyon attracts many hikers, campers, and wilderness lovers each day.
With campgrounds and hikes to beautiful hot springs, it is one of the hidden gems of Utah. Sadly, in 2020, a woman went missing on the trail.
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It was November of 2020 when a 47-year-old woman ventured onto the Dry Canyon Trailhead in Diamond Fork Canyon. Unlike other day hikers, she did not make it back to the parking lot.
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The search began the same day as her disappearance after US Forest Service officials found her car abandoned at one of the trails campgrounds.
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After investigating the surrounding area and the campground where the woman’s car was left, detectives concluded — the missing woman might struggle with mental health.
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During an interview, one of the detectives on the scenes said they gathered information “that suggested this woman might struggle with mental health challenges.” Co-workers would later corroborate this information.
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The conclusion brought more people onto the scene, wanting to help find the woman lost in the vast wilderness of the trail and canyon.
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Along with the Utah County Sheriff’s Office deputies, search and rescue volunteers began scouring the area, hoping to find some clues about where the woman might be.
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Sadly, no one in the search party came up with anything; they had no clue where the woman ventured off to, or why.
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The only thing that gave any semblance that she might have passed through was an abandoned tent tucked away in the foliage. No one was there, though, and they couldn’t be certain it even belonged to the missing woman.
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Eventually, authorities concluded that the missing woman didn’t want to be found. They believe she voluntarily left her car and wandered into the wilderness of Diamond Fork Canyon. The question was, why?
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They didn’t even have people to contact to gain information on the missing woman. At the time, it was nothing more than a waiting game, hoping a clue or trace of her would show up.
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The Utah County Sheriff’s Office deputies and the forest service were at a loss; they had no idea where the missing woman could be. It didn’t help that Diamond Canyon was so vast either. She could be anywhere.
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Even so, they didn’t give up hope that one day they would find her.
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In a press release, Sergeant Spencer Cannon of the Utah County Sheriff’s Office spoke of what they had found, or didn’t find, on the trail.
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He said, “Detectives and Search and Rescue officials with the Utah County Sheriff’s Office (UCSO) searched the area by ground and from the air but could not find anyone.”
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After the trail led to a dead-end, the Utah County Sheriff’s Office decided to dive into some detective work. They decided the next best plan of attack was to check telephone records and see if they could pinpoint her location.
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What they found suggested she made her way to Colorado after leaving her car and camping apparatus behind.
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While the Utah County Sheriff’s Office met another dead end with the telephone records, not believing she had made her way to Colorado, they decided to try and identify her family.
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With the information they had accumulated, they were unable to find anyone. According to Sergeant Cannon, “Over the next several months, efforts were made to identify and contact family without success.”
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While they were unable to contact family members, the sheriff’s department was able to locate co-workers. The co-workers corroborated what they had already thought, that she did, in fact, struggle with mental illness.
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They didn’t know why she would wander into the Diamond Canyon area or where she would have gone.
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It took several months, but the department finally put together a team comprised of a Utah County Sheriff’s Office sergeant, a search and rescue coordinator, and a group from a nonprofit aerial search organization.
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They hoped to find some evidence leading them to the missing woman, which would help them locate her.
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The team began searching with high hopes that she was still in the Diamond Canyon area. The aerial team had brought along a drone, something that would help them cover way more ground in a shorter amount of time.
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Unfortunately, on their first attempt to use the technology, it crashed.
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Speaking of the crash to Fox 13, Sergeant Cannon said, “They sent the drone up, and apparently, on one of its first passes, the drone crashed. So they went up looking for the drone that had crashed…”
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They didn’t anticipate the crashed drone actually helping them in their efforts to find the missing woman.
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When the team set off to retrieve the crashed drone, they stumbled upon a tent. “So they went up looking for the drone that had crashed, and in doing that, they came across another small campsite where there was a tent,” Sergeant Cannon told Fox 13.
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Amazingly, this tent’s zipper opened up, and a face popped out.
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Sergeant Cannon told Fox 13, “As they’re looking at this, the zipper of the tent unzipped, and this woman who we had identified the previous year in November and December of last year sticks her head out.”
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They had found the missing woman, whose name had not been released to the public.
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According to the Utah County Sheriff’s Office, “This woman… had lost a significant amount of weight and was weak, but she was apparently also resourceful.”
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It looked as though she had rationed the food she brought along, as well as foraged for grass and moss to eat. There was even a river close by for water.
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After seeing the woman in her makeshift home, authorities believed she knew what she was doing. She purposefully left her car behind to live in Diamond Canyon.
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Even so, the deputies were not going to leave her there and decided to bring the 47-year-old to Utah Valley Hospital for a mental health evaluation.
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During an interview, Sergeant Cannon said, ‘”I have to be honest, we fully expected we wouldn’t find anybody related to that alive up here given how long it had been… In situations like that, we often find somebody after they passed away.”
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“Our hats off to her as a survivor. Whatever else is going on in her life, her ability to survive in undoubtedly difficult circumstances is remarkable.” It had been nearly six months since the initial search.
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While she was technically living in a public area, the sheriff’s department wanted to make it clear that what the woman did was not against any law.
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In a statement, they said, “We want to be clear that while many people might choose to not live in the circumstances and conditions this woman did, she did nothing against the law.”