What was at first feared to be a dire emergency on a stormy night in the remote wilderness of northeastern Minnesota turned into an adventure eight Girl Scouts won't soon forget.
The Chicago-area teens were midway through a weeklong canoe trip in the Boundary Canoe Waters Area Wilderness late Friday when thunderstorms rolled in. Suddenly, lightning struck close to their campsite on Knife Lake.
"A couple of the girls said they may have felt something in the ground," a Girl Scout spokeswoman said Saturday.
Though the teens were shaken, nobody appeared to be hurt. But their Minnesota guide, following Girl Scout protocol, radioed BWCA officials to report the lightning.
The guide suspected the girls "might have experienced ground current," said Nancy McMullen, director of communications for the Girl Scouts of Minnesota and Wisconsin Lakes and Pines, a local organization that's been helping the visitors from the Girl Scouts of Greater Chicago and Northwest Indiana.
"Better safe than sorry," the guide and officials reasoned, and decided to have the girls brought back to Ely for medical exams, McMullen said. The guide provided the exact GPS coordinates of their campsite, which was along a preplanned route.
A dramatic overnight extraction ensued. Rescuers paddled nearly 16 miles into the chain of lakes to reach the party. The campers were then given five minutes to collect their things and head for the canoes, a parent said. Their tents were left behind.
The Scouts, who ranged in age from 14 to 17, paddled for more than two hours in the darkness to return safely to their base camp in Ely sometime after 4 a.m. Saturday.