Photo Found After Flooding Reveals Final Image of 7 Hikers

Seven hikers in safety helmets, wetsuits and climbing harnesses smiled for a group photo before heading into the mouth of a narrow desert canyon in southern Utah’s Zion National Park.
Photo Found After Flooding Reveals Final Image of 7 Hikers
This photo released by National Park Service shows from left to right: Gary Favela, Don Teichner, Muku Reynolds, Steve Arthur, Linda Arthur, Robin Brum, and Mark MacKenzie. The hikers, six from California and one from Nevada, died when fast-moving floodwaters rushed through a narrow park canyon Monday, Sept. 14, 2015. National Park Service via AP
|Updated:

SALT LAKE CITY—Seven hikers in safety helmets, wetsuits and climbing harnesses smiled for a group photo before heading into the mouth of a narrow desert canyon in southern Utah’s Zion National Park.

The men and women from California and Nevada posed with their arms around each other before trying to climb and swim through the popular sandstone gorge. Days later, rescuers searching for their bodies found the camera, revealing the final image of the group before they died.

Within hours of entering Keyhole Canyon, dark skies unleashed fierce rains that sent water surging through the chasm, sweeping the group to their deaths Monday.

Park officials said some in the group were new to canyoneering and had completed a beginner’s course before the excursion. Others in the group were passionate about the sport, family members said Friday.

Linda Arthur, 57, and Steve Arthur, 58, both of Camarillo, California, were outdoor enthusiasts with three children and seven grandchildren, the couple’s family said.

Steve Arthur was a 21-year veteran of the Ventura County Sheriff’s Department, where he was a sergeant and recipient of a local Medal of Valor award for trying to save an accident victim from a burning vehicle, according to the Ventura County Star.

“You just couldn’t imagine people who were better neighbors, and they were wonderful to everybody,” neighbor, Ronald Ormsby, 84, told the newspaper.

Gary Favela, 51, of Rancho Cucamonga, California, was adventurous and outgoing with a love for canyoneering, while Muku Reynolds, 59, of Chino, California, was a grandmother and passionate hiker, their families said in statements released Friday by park officials.

Robin Brum, 53, of Camarillo, California, was a mother, wife and selfless person who cared for those around her, her family said.

“She leaves a hole in our hearts and our lives that will never be filled,” the family said.

Search and rescue team members carry a body after it was found along Pine Creek, Wednesday, Sept. 16, 2015, in Zion National Park, near Springdale, Utah. Authorities are searching for other hikers killed in flash flooding that swept through a narrow canyon at Utah's Zion National Park. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)
Search and rescue team members carry a body after it was found along Pine Creek, Wednesday, Sept. 16, 2015, in Zion National Park, near Springdale, Utah. Authorities are searching for other hikers killed in flash flooding that swept through a narrow canyon at Utah's Zion National Park. AP Photo/Rick Bowmer