Amelia hit the ice and thought it was over.
Alone, deaf, freezing, and lost on a vast Alaskan mountain, she had already fallen hundreds of feet. Her GPS beacon was her last resort—but even rescue helicopters can come too late. Then she saw it: a white “wolf” watching her in the snow. It started walking straigh… Continues…
Amelia Milling set out for a solo three-day hike in Alaska, craving challenge, not comfort. The climb turned into a nightmare when she slipped, hurtled down 600 feet of snow and ice, and came to rest battered, disoriented, and utterly alone. She could walk, but she was lost, freezing, and more than a day from help. In that vast white silence, fear pressed in from every side.
Then a shape appeared on the horizon—a white canine she first mistook for a wolf. As it approached, she saw the collar, the single word “guide,” and realized this was Nanook, a local husky known for finding lost hikers. He refused to leave her. He led her back to the trail, slept beside her through the brutal night, and when a raging river dragged her under, he leapt in and hauled her out by her backpack strap. Only then did Amelia trigger her GPS beacon. When the rescue helicopter finally arrived, troopers found not just a stranded young woman, but a loyal dog pressed to her side. She credits Nanook—not the chopper—as the true hero who kept her alive long enough to be found, proof that sometimes the difference between life and death has four legs and a beating heart.





