The two Boy Scout leaders stood under the shade of towering trees near the shore, soaking wet and forced to abandoned their canoe in a Boundary Waters lake. Their strobe light flashed in hopes of catching someone's attention.
Minutes later, a State Patrol helicopter whirred above with rope dangling, then lifted the men — and their spirits — to safety and a reunion with the six other Ohio adventurers whose canoes were overwhelmed Thursday afternoon on a windswept and misty Basswood Lake.
"They were happy to see us," said St. Paul Fire Capt. Alan Gabriele, who is part of the Twin Cities-based Minnesota Air Rescue Team (MART), which since 2012 has pulled off four airborne rescues around the state.
The drama unfolded on an open expanse of the lake, north of Ely and within shouting distance of the Canadian border, and left five Scouts, their two leaders from back home and a locally based Scout leader soggy but relieved to be alive and shaking off mild hypothermia.
Justin Mayne, a captain with the Lake County Rescue Squad, said all eight were in the water at some point and had on life jackets, and "without those, we probably would've had a very different outcome."
Mayne added that "it was getting pretty dark out there," but he and the others were ready to work through the darkness if there were still lives to be saved.
The Scouts, ages 15 to 17, and their two leaders were from a troop based in the Cincinnati suburb of West Chester. They brought a satellite phone with them into the rugged wilderness, which is famous for being unkind to cellphone reception. That phone was how the group got word out that there was trouble.
"The last thing I said before he left was, 'Keep my boys safe,' " said Diana Hudson, whose husband, Howard, was on the adventure with her twin 15-year-old sons, Jake and Grant Lemen.