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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Oregon couple spend two nights stuck in snow while on tree hunt

Keith and Jennifer Lee  are reunited with daughter Madeline, 8.  (Associated Press)
Jeff Barnard Associated Press

MEDFORD, Ore. – Keith and Jennifer Lee were driving home on a remote mountain road, their prized Christmas tree strapped to the roof of their all-wheel-drive vehicle, when they rounded a backcountry corner and found themselves suddenly mired in snow.

Out of cell phone range, and unaware a search was under way, the couple spent three days and two cold nights before Keith Lee finally freed the Subaru and drove home, the tree still tied on top.

They soon heard radio news reports about a search that had begun Wednesday with a helicopter, Sno-Cats and ATVs. They called 911, then phoned a close friend who was taking care of their four children.

“I screamed, ‘They’re safe, they’re coming home,’ ” said the friend, Sophie Smith. “Everybody just fell and cried.”

Just like thousands of Oregonians each year, the Lees bought a Christmas tree permit from the local national forest office and headed out Tuesday morning to find the perfect tree – a silver-tip fir that only grows at high elevation, just like the one they got a year ago.

The couple also ventured into the Siskiyou Mountains near the California border last year, but got lost. They were better prepared this time, bringing two maps, a cell phone equipped with GPS, three blankets and 24 bottles of water. They purposely drove their all-wheel-drive vehicle, but didn’t take chains or food. The couple cut the tree and headed for home. Then disaster struck.

“We went around the corner, and there was no snow and then all of a sudden it was like quicksand,” said Jennifer Lee, 38. “We just sunk into two feet of snow.”

Keith Lee, 36, tried rocking, putting the car in drive, then quickly in reverse. But each time the car slid back closer to a cliff.

Above the fog that regularly socks in the Rogue Valley in winter, the Lees were warm during the day. The couple huddled under their blankets at night, running the car engine 15 minutes every hour for heat. They had no food, but plenty of water.

Smith had picked up 8-year-old Madeline after school on Tuesday, as planned. When the Lees didn’t return to their Medford home that night, Smith brought the rest of the kids and the dog to her house. She called police Wednesday morning.

Meanwhile, authorities were trying to figure out where to begin their search.

“It was absolutely a needle in a haystack,” Medford police Sgt. Mike Budreau said. “The more time that went by, the more concerned we got and we were absolutely concerned we were not going to find them alive.”

Police had two clues: the Lees had gone into the Siskiyous for last year’s tree. And they had left behind a piece of paper with the numbers 37 and 140 on it, a reference to two highways that mark a popular Christmas tree spot in the Cascade Range, clear on the other side of the valley. Around-the-clock searches of both areas turned up nothing.

The couple knew exactly where they were but had no way to communicate, Jennifer Lee said.

Early Thursday morning, a newly determined Keith Lee changed strategies, rocking the car forward instead of backward, putting rocks underneath the tires, and filling in the ruts from behind.

“Suddenly the car just shot forward,” he said.

Keith Lee said he was undaunted, and would be going back to the mountains for his silver-tip again next year, because they are so beautiful and freshly cut trees last so much longer than the ones available at a lot.

But his wife said she would be staying home.

“What were we thinking?” she said. “Thirty dollars for a Christmas tree. Just pay the $30 and be done with it. Thirty dollars wasn’t worth our life.”