EXhaust, dehydrated and disoriented, Carolina Wilga It was certain that he wouldn’t find alive after spending 11 nights lost in the remote Australian Outback.
Without the clue where she went and she left her van very well to try to find help, she focused on a navigation guide who knew, walking the West next Sun.
She knew that the weather was expiring as she breaks through one of the latest inhabited and distant places in the world.
However, through incredible happiness she managed to survive, Finding a path in which local and delivered to safety remained.
It is a rare story of survival for someone who lacked so long in a difficult terrain. Western Australia acting against Det Insful Jessica Securo said it was a “amazing result”, after a Multi-day search of huge bushland Approximately 200 miles northeast of Pertha, including police, planes and helicopters for murder, as well as local inhabitants.
“It’s happiness. The area outside, there is a mixed terrain. It can be quite dangerous if you don’t know what you do or enter the area,” said Det Insful Securo.
“She is essentially in the desert about 11 nights, which is significant, and just brings us back to how happy she was that she was safe and well, and how grateful we could find her.”

The 26-year-old German backpack lived in Western Australia (WA) for two years, and headed out a trip to the east of the country without concrete plans outside the research of new places, the police said.
She drove through the city lighthouse, on the edge of the Wheatbelt Wheatbelt region, stopping at the general store for some supplies. Driving in a comining natural reserve Karroun Hill, her Mitsubishi Delica became in the wet sand around 20 miles from the nearest road.
Mrs. Wilga tried to pull her out, using a recovery and boarding tray, but nothing seemed to work. She spent the night with a vehicle, but without a reception of the phone, she decided to try to seek help and quickly became lost.
After that, she decided to follow the sun, walking west to try to find any sign of another human life.

Western Australia is huge. The largest Australian state, which covers almost a million square miles, is more than half of the European Union area. It is also rarely inhabited: more than two-thirds of three million state inhabitants live in the capital of Perth, and most of the state is agricultural land, mining or nature.
Mrs. Wilga faced a bad time – nights of the extremely cold, the police said, without her vehicle was fully exposed to elements. He also rained strongly for a few days.
However, Det Insc Securo said that it was good that it was not too hot – the temperature in the state can exceed 40C in summer.
Lifeguards had serious fears for MS Wilg after so much time in the wild. The German backpack is another person who disappeared in the area in the last 12 months.
Barry Submore, 73, is missing from December after the look of gold on Hill Karroun was paid, according to ABC.
His vehicle was found abandoned about 25 miles from the police north of Beacon in May, but no trace of man was found.
Det Insc Securo said that people living in WA know it is huge and in time a dangerous place.
“It can be quite challenging to survive in those areas if you don’t know where you go or what you do,” she said.
“So, all we can advise it is to invest in things like personal locators, where you can collect emergencies if you come into trouble, share your travel plans with your loved ones when you arrive in one person.”

Her other advice for people who come across problems like Mrs. Wilg to keep people with their vehicle.
“It’s far easier for an antenna to find a vehicle than a person,” she said.
Mrs. Wilga’s vehicle was found first, the day before noticed local only 15 miles from an abandoned van.
“She was very traumatized and she was just flooded to find someone who could help her,” said Detective Inspector, who talked to Mrs Wilg in the hospital on Saturday morning.
“Look, she’s good. She’s very tired. She had a good dream, she had a shower. We have a little food, which she just took one day at this time.”
Receiving treatment for your minor injuries, including many mosquito bites, as well as emotional support, MS Wilga remains in the hospital and is in contact with family in Germany.
But in spite of the remaining overflowing temptation, Det Insc Securo said that the backpacker currently does not have plans for leaving Australia.
“Karolina told me to love Australia. We still have so many trips here. It’s not yet on the east coast, so it’s still on her bucket. So I think he has the ability to stay, she definitely wants.”