Monday, 2 December 2019

Australian woman survives 12 days in outback after finding watering holev

Tamra McBeath-Riley and her dog Raya
Tamra McBeath-Riley and her dog Raya had been on a drive to the outback
A woman rescued after 12 days stranded in Australia's remote outback said she survived by eating biscuits and drinking from a watering hole.

Tamra McBeath-Riley was with two other people who became stranded when their car got stuck in a riverbed. The group split up to get help. Ms McBeath-Riley was found near her car but her companions are still missing.
Australia, Northern Territory
Alice Springs is one of the larger towns in the remote Northern Territory
Police said they would be "severely dehydrated" after being stranded in the outback for 13 days.


'It kept them alive'

The 52-year-old woman had set off with two others, Claire Hockridge and Phu Tran, on an afternoon drive from Alice Springs in the Northern Territory on 19 November.

They took Ms McBeath-Riley's dog Raya, a female Staffordshire bull terrier, with them. The group were travelling in remote territory just south of Alice Springs when they found themselves stuck in the bed of the Hugh River.

Speaking to reporters outside a hospital in Alice Springs, Ms McBeath-Riley said the group had stayed by the car for around three days in an attempt to free it.

"We tried many times to try to get out, but just couldn't get out, the river was just too large," she said.