The woman who rescued Carolina Wilga from the Aussie outback recalled the ’emotional’ moment she hugged the German backpacker after stumbling across her.
Ms Wilga, 26, was last seen at about midday on June 29 at a general store in Beacon, a small town about 300km north-east of Perth.
Authorities found her van abandoned in the Karroun Hill area – about 50km northeast – on Thursday with fears the young backpacker may have met a grim end.
Ms Wilga then emerged from the thick scrub near Karroun Hill Nature Reserve, at about 4.20pm on Friday after hearing a passing motorist.
Over the course of 12 days, she had used the sun to navigate westward from her van until she finally stumbled across Mouroubra Road and station owner Tania Henley.
‘I pulled over and got out and gave her a hug,’ Ms Henley told Nine News on Saturday.
‘She was crying. It was pretty emotional.’
Police have revealed Ms Wilga was able to survive the 11 nights in the remote outback by drinking water from puddles and rationing the limited food she’d brought with her.
She found whatever shelter she could at night to protect herself from freezing conditions, including a cave.
When Ms Henley unexpectedly found the backpacker, Ms Wilga was dehydrated, had injured her foot, and was covered in mosquito bites.
‘She was thin, fragile, everybody would be fragile you know 12 days to be missing out in the bush, it’s usually not a good result,’ Ms Henley said.
The station owner gave Ms Wilga an apple and called police to report her miraculous discovery.
The German was filmed boarding a police plane an hour later, dressed in a long skirt and jumper.
She had a scarf bandaged around her foot and walked to the cabin with a slight limp.
Ms Wilga was flown to Perth’s Fiona Stanley Hospital, where WA Police Acting Inspector Jessica Securo said she would remain on Saturday.
‘She still needs emotional support around her and some of her injuries attended to,’ she said.
Ms Wilga was struggling to comprehend her ordeal and rescue in the hours after.
‘She is still in disbelief that she was able to survive. In her mind, she had convinced herself that she was not going to be located,’ Insp Securo said.
‘Eleven days out there is significant.
‘She got to a point where she thought no one was coming.’
Ms Wilga was last seen at a convenience store in Beacon on June 29, after filling her van up with fuel the previous day 200km away in Toodyay.
Police were alerted to her disappearance after her family in Germany couldn’t reach her.
The report sparked a massive manhunt, including homicide squad officers.
A PolAir helicopter found her van on Thursday. It had been bogged in Karroun Hill Reserve, around 100km from her last known location.
Ms Wilga later told police she made the decision to abandon her car after one night while in a state of ‘pure panic’.
‘She basically looked at the direction of the sun and tried to head west, thinking that would be her best bet of coming across someone or a road,’ Insp Securo said.
Family and friends of Ms Wilga rejoiced at the news of her finally being found on Friday.
Five of her friends were waiting for her outside the hospital and told reporters they planned to take her out for a pub feed once she recovered.
‘We just heard from the news that she was found and alive, which had everyone excited,’ friend and fellow traveller Miranda told the West n.
She said Ms Wilga’s parents ‘couldn’t believe’ their daughter had been found.
‘They almost couldn’t believe it, but yeah, they were just overwhelmed with happiness,’ she said.
Friend Jules Briand said he was keen to hear Ms Wilga’s incredible story of survival.
‘I can’t wait to hug her and tell her that she got us worried … and have good food and drink with her,’ he said.
WA Police Inspector Martin Glynn told reporters it was sure to be a ‘remarkable’ story.
‘As you can imagine from the trauma she’s suffered for the last few days, she’s been obviously through a great deal,’ Insp Glynn said.
‘She’s obviously in quite a fragile condition at the moment.
‘She’s coped in some amazing conditions. (It’s a) very hostile environment out there.’
Insp Securo called for Ms Wilga’s story to be remembered as a warning to those travelling through remote areas.
‘Invest in things like personal locator beacons, where you may be able to raise emergency services if you come into trouble,’ she said.
‘You’re best off remaining with your car far easier for an aerial search to locate a vehicle than it is a person.’