Like so many lost Utah Boy Scouts before him, Brennan Hawkins made it home alive.

The Bountiful boy's ordeal is nothing new to the state's history books — many Boy Scouts have been reported missing in Utah's vast forests. In 1989, a 10-year-old Scout survived five days in a Tooele County mine. And just last summer, another lost Scout was found in the High Uintas after two days of wandering.

"We have a tremendous batting record," said Kay Godfrey, spokesman for the Great Salt Lake Council of the Boy Scouts of America.

Of the 110,000 Scouts in the state who spent a total of just over a half-million nights in the wilds in 2003, four were lost and found safely a few days later.

But not every Scout has been so lucky.

The Bardsley family still mourns for their son, Garrett, who disappeared last August in the High Uintas. Garrett was a member of the Scout's Utah National Parks Council, based in Orem.

To this day, Garrett's father, Kevin Bardsley, returns to the Uintas to search for his son's remains. The 12-year-old Boy Scout vanished while camping at a lake about 21 miles from where Brennan wandered away last Friday.

Garrett proved to be the exception to the rule of happy endings.

Nobody thought 10-year-old Joshua Dennis would ever be found.

Missing for five days in an abandoned mine near Stockton, Tooele County, Joshua's survival was hailed as a miracle.

Joshua became lost in the labyrinth of tangled caverns of the Hidden Treasure Mine Sept. 22, 1989, while his Scout troop was exploring. More than 200 volunteers joined law enforcement teams in a massive search.

The Kearns boy sought refuge on a mine ledge 150 feet above the main floor of the mine and about 500 feet away from where he was last seen with his Boy Scout troop. Searchers passed by the perch daily without noticing a thing and began to lose hope of ever finding the boy.

It wasn't until five days later that three rescue workers heard a distant voice cry, "Help."

The boy suffered frostbite on several toes, dehydration and exhaustion.

A Hollywood superstar came to the rescue of another lost Utah Boy Scout.

Actor Harrison Ford located 13-year-old Cody Clawson in Wyoming's rugged Targhee National Forest on July 10, 2001. The Huntsville, Weber County, teen spent the night in the dense forest after he became separated from his troop when he missed the trail turnoff while carrying gear from a parking lot to a nearby campsite.

He had nothing more than his Scout shirt, Scout belt, shorts and sandals.

The next morning, Cody said, he heard three aircraft hovering overhead. The boy waved his gold-buckled Scout belt over his head to send a glimmer into the sky.

Ford, who lives part time near Jackson, Wyo., and is a helicopter pilot, spotted Cody at about 7:30 a.m. The movie star touched down in a clearing about 5 miles from the camp and brought Cody back to safety.

Last summer, 13-year-old William Dunn survived two days in the High Uintas after he became separated from his Boy Scout troop.

Dunn was among 14 teens and nine adults with Scout Troop 195 who took off from a trail head at China Meadows last summer for a four-day, 50-mile trip through the mountains toward the Uinta Canyon trail head.

William had been trying to catch up to a group from his troop that was walking ahead of him and took a wrong turn.

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Although hungry and tired, William was in overall good health when rescuers found him.

Hawkins, 11, was at a Scout camp at the East Fork of the Bear Scout Reservation. Although Godfrey said the camp was for 14- and 15-year-old boys, Hawkins is a registered Scout and was a guest of an older boy.

Godfrey said the incident will be reviewed to see if there is anything the Boy Scouts should do to cut down on the number of Scouts getting lost at camp. "We're always concerned," he said. "There are always things we can do better."


Contributing: ldethman@desnews.com; preavy@desnews.com

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