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Inside the search for missing backpacker Carolina Wilga

Inside the search for missing backpacker Carolina Wilga

Police found the 1995 Mitsubishi Delica had run into mechanical problems, and believed Wilga had tried to use recovery board and bits of wood to free the car, which had become bogged in a patch of mud.
However, like in Podmore's case, there was no sign of the backpacker.
Details about the ensuing days remain a mystery, but the hunt for Wilga came to an end on Friday when she was rescued by a station owner returning from Beacon along a remote bush road.
Tania Henley told media Wilga stumbled out from the bushes and waved her down.
Wilga has offered little insight into her 11 nights in the bush, but said she survived by sleeping in a cave, drinking from puddles and using the sun as her guide.
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Bush survivalist instructor Mike Cook said it was clear the backpacker had luck on her side.
'It's a harsh environment, and it's quite difficult to navigate without aids … it's difficult to get any sort of sense of where you are, if you're not familiar with solar navigation,' he said.
'It sounds like she had some idea about trying to sort of pick a direction and head west after she decided to leave her car.'
Cook said any traveller looking to drive east in WA should be conscious of the lack of water in the region as it borders the desert.
'You have to go with the mindset that if you did break down, you should be right for a solid week, at least with sufficient water and stuff like that,' he said.
Wilga's van was stocked with days' worth of food and water. The traveller said she was disorientated when she decided to walk away from the area carrying no supplies.
Searchers confirmed the bushland was hard going, with low shrubbery and very little distinct terrain to help someone who was lost.
Posting to social media from Fiona Stanley Hospital on Tuesday, Wilga joked she would need to gain '12 kilos back' after her ordeal, but still has not spoken about what she went through.
Celebrity agent and public relations expert Max Markson said the backpacker, who spent her fifth night in hospital on Tuesday, would probably be fielding calls from media outlets across the country wanting to share her story, with Nine's 60 Minutes and Seven's Spotlight showing interest.
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'They're the ones who would do the story and do it properly – as opposed to 15 minutes, they'd do 30 minutes of television,' he said.
Markson said Wilga could ask for between $50,000 and $100,000 to exclusively share her ordeal.
'I think it's really important to have someone who can not just represent her for this deal, but for other deals that will happen – I'm sure there'll be a magazine deal at one stage,' he said.
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German backpacker Carolina Wilga discharged from Fiona Stanley Hospital in Perth
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