Alaska News

Friends of missing German press on with search in frozen Arctic Alaska

Despite the slim chance adventurer Thomas Seibold remains alive in Alaska's cold and remote Brooks Range, the Teaching Drum Outdoor School in Wisconsin says it is going to press on with a search for the 31-year-old man or his body. The school, where Seibold taught outdoors survival, is now trying to enlist the help of the National Park Service and raise funds to organize a ground search by local residents in Northwest Alaska.

In a press release Friday, Teaching Drum founder and director Tamarack Song indicated that materials turned over to the school by Alaska State Troopers indicate early search efforts may have been conducted in the wrong area. After Seibold, a German national, was reported missing in early November, troopers flew to a cabin where he had been staying, and found his personal affects. They then searched the area, including the route he was expected to travel from the cabin to the village of Kobuk. They found no sign of Seibold.

Over the course of 13 days, the agency conducted six flights to look for Seibold. In the meantime, a letter Seibold had been writing to his wife -- Maggie Traylor, an editor for Teaching Drum's publishing arm -- was sent to Wisconsin. Troopers earlier refused to provide copies of Seibold's writing to the Dispatch. The Troopers ended their search efforts Nov. 24. Some members of Teaching Drum subsequently flew to Ambler to investigate, and the school began going over Seibold's writings.

According to the press release Friday, Maggie Traylor's writings and documents revealed some information about where Seibold might be. The press release said:

The Ambler River headwater area that interested Seibold lies primarily within the 6.5-million-acre Noatak National Preserve and the adjacent Gates of the Arctic National Park and Preserve, which sprawls across 8.5 million acres of wilderness. The park service maintains an area office in Kotzebue, from which search efforts for Seibold originated, and has a small air force at its disposal in the 49th state. However, it had not previously been asked to help in the search.

"Only 25 percent of the 20-by-30 mile headwaters area has been searched," Teaching Drum said in the press release. "To shift the search to those areas, Park Service cooperation will be sought. In addition, a ground search utilizing professional trackers and snowmobiles is being organized."

The group is soliciting contributions to help meet expenses at: Recovery Fund for Thomas Seibold, First National Bank, PO Box 627, Three Lakes, WI 54562

Contact Craig Medred at craig(at)alaskadispatch.com

Craig Medred

Craig Medred is a former writer for the Anchorage Daily News, Alaska Dispatch and Alaska Dispatch News. He left the ADN in 2015.

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