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Tuesday, January 15, 2013

Father, Sons Die Hiking

For the weekend trip was a surprise for the birthday of his wife's lover, the Air Force veteran outside with two children decided to walk off the beaten. Wearing only light jackets and sweaters, three apparently did not know how fast the weather deteriorates, which proved to be fatal.
The researchers found the body of 36, impregnated David Decareaux and two boys - 10 years and Dominic Grant 8 years - Ozark Trail Sunday, the day after Decareaux refused the offer passersby walk back to the hotel where he was staying, Reynolds County Sheriff Tom Volner said. The cold killed them, he said.
Single family 4 months labrador yellow survived the hike. It was found near Decareaux, died at the scene, but not boys, who were pronounced dead at the hospital after an hour trying to revive him.
The tragedy crushed Decareaux stepfather, stepmother, Kate Hartrum, who described the family as dense, "always in motion and adventure."
"Dave is a great guy, a good father, a good son and her husband," he told The Associated Press Hartrum. "These two guys were just perfect. - The smart guys, very good "
E 'was nearly 60 degrees on Saturday morning, when Decareaux and children including the popular trail, which passes through sparsely populated areas southeast of the State of Missouri. Decareaux only wear a light jacket and a child wearing a wool sweater, another sweater, Volner said.
Were well equipped, as temperatures dipped into the 40s, and the storm that dropped 2 inches of rain series, making the road almost impassable.
Volner said no caves or other shelters along the way. Although Decareaux had a cell phone and a flashlight with him, both teams were without power at one point, his wife, Sarah, said St. Louis Post-Dispatch on Monday.
Seen from tourists for more than three hours for the trip and asked if we needed to go back to Brushy Creek Lodge near Black, Missouri, where his wife and son Decareaux three - ages 12, 4 and 2 - remained . Decareaux but he refused, saying that the man who could do it again, the sheriff said.
"He just lost his ride in the country," said the sheriff. "For the moment, the play of light. Did not cover here, because there is no city or country. In the dark you can not see the back of his hand."
Officials of the country of origin called the sheriff's office at 19:00 on Saturday, fearing that tourists do not return. Research on over 50 volunteers on foot, horse and carriage continued until about 0:30 on Sunday, when we look at the flooding rivers moved before dawn.
With the weather was very cold, and the temperature has fallen to 20 years of age dawn.
E 'was shortly after the bodies of tourists were wet, his dog beside them. No autopsy was planned, and death have been associated with hypothermia, Volner said.
Hartrum described Decareaux, who lived in Millstadt, Illinois, as a loving father and a spiritual man, who retired from the Air Force in recent years, and works in collaboration with the Ministry of Defence to work, it could not discuss, even in private. Karen Petitt, a spokesman Scott AFB strengths southwestern Illinois told Decareaux worked for the Defense Information Systems Agency at the Pentagon.
Decareaux and his wife were married 14 years ago, after a chance meeting, it was "love at first sight," said Hartrum, who lives near Waterloo, Illinois, has benefited from its offices abroad , use them to explore Europe over the last decade, with his family, he said.
"They were strong, good and healthy marriages," he said, noting Decareaux was a seasoned traveler, "who had been captured (last week) in a normal situation," which proved fatal .
Decareaux Sarah said that prayer and spiritual faith helped journalists.
"We are a Christian family," said Post-Dispatch on the way to the funeral home to make arrangements. "I know where I am now."

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