Leia and Caroline Carrico have been reunited with their mother after spending 44 hours lost in the woods until they were ultimately found this morning.
âYou are in so much trouble,â Misty Carrico told the first girl as she pulled her into her arms shortly before noon today. A video of the reunion shows both parents sobbing tears of joy at the sight of their daughters.
Mark McKenna, a local photographer on scene to document the girlsâ reunion with their mother, said the girls stated that they spent Friday night sleeping under a log but got wet in the rain and so spent Saturday night in a âhuckleberry cave.â

The girls, who apparently wandered into the woods around 2:30 p.m. March 1, after their mother told them she wasnât ready to go for a walk, were found near Richardson Grove State Park, about 1.5 miles south of their home. According to the Humboldt County Sheriffâs Office, the girls were located by Piercy Volunteer Fire Department volunteers Delbert Chumley and Abraham Hill, who had found some boot prints around 8:30 a.m. and followed them to the girls, who responded when members of the search team called out shortly before 10:30 a.m.
The sisters were evaluated by medical personnel for dehydration and weâre given water and warm, dry clothing. The girls told their rescuers that they had been following a deer trail when they became lost on March 1, at which point they decided to stay where they were and drank water from huckleberry leaves.
More than 250 people from across the state responded to assist with the rescue effort, with more than 20 agencies participating.
Weâll update with more information as we get it. McKenna provided the following slideshow of the girls’ being reunited with their family. Find the full press release from the Sheriffâs Office copied below and check back for more photos and information from the day, which Sheriff William Honsal described as nothing short of a miracle.
Search and rescue teams have located Caroline and Leia Carricoalive and well, more than 44 hours after they were last seen in Southern Humboldt County.
On March 3, 2019, around 10:30 a.m., searchers Delbert Chumley and Abram Hill from the Piercy Volunteer Fire Department located the two girls approximately 1.4 miles away from their home in Benbow.
Chumley and Hill located boot prints believed to belong to the girls around 8:30 a.m. today, March 3. Those tracks led the team southeast to an area near Richardson Grove State Park. Caroline and Leia responded when crew members called out to them. The girls were located huddled together under a bush. The sisters were evaluated by medical personnel for dehydration and given water and warm, dry clothing. They were reunited with family shortly after being located. The girls told first responders that they were following a deer trail when they had become lost. The two decided to stay put, drinking fresh water from Huckleberry leaves.
More than 250 personnel from across the state responded to assist in this operation. The Humboldt County Sheriffâs Office would like to thank all of the agencies and jurisdictions involved in bringing Caroline and Leia home safe. We would like to especially thank the Governorâs Office of Emergency Services (Cal OES) for their assistance in coordinating agency response from across the state, the California National Guard for their ground and air support provided, and Mendocino, Napa and Marin counties for helping organize the search and rescue operation.
Agencies involved included:
o California Office of Emergency Services
o Humboldt Bay Fire
o Piercy Volunteer Fire Department
o Redway Fire
o Fortuna Fire
o CAL FIRE
o Southern Humboldt Technical Rescue
o Humboldt County Sheriffâs Search and Rescue Posse
o California Highway Patrol
o California National Guard
o United States Coast Guard
o California Department of Fish and Wildlife
o California State Parks
o Salmon Creek FireCounties represented included:
o Mendocino County
o Marin County
o Trinity County
o Napa County
o Alameda County
o Solano County
o Santa Clara County
o Sonoma County
o Lake County
o Contra Costa County
o Siskiyou County
o Del Norte County
o Placer County
o El Dorado County
o San Mateo County
o Nevada County
The public tip line established by the Sheriffâs Office has now been deactivated.The Sheriffâs Office would also like to thank the public for their overwhelming support during this entire effort. Throughout this process we have received several inquiries from those who wanted to help in the ground search effort. We encourage all who would like to get involved in future searches to consider applying for our Sheriffâs Search and Rescue Posse This is a volunteer posse that is deployed to all of our local (and many out of the area) search and rescue operations. Find out how to join here:Â http://www.humboldtsar.com.
This article appears in Wild 2019.

