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Ricky Megee

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panorama of the desolate Tanami Desert
The Tanami Desert where Ricky Megee was stranded for 71 days

Ricky Megee (born 1970/1971) is an Australian, most notable for having been stranded in the Outback and surviving for 71 days in 2006. Megee later gave contradictory statements as to how he came to be stranded crossing the Northern Territory and Western Australia. On one occasion he said that his car broke down, and on another that he had been carjacked by an armed gang. However, a doctor later confirmed that Megee's appearance was consistent with having lived in extreme conditions. Like most deserts, the Tanami can reach 40 °C (104 °F) during the day but still be very cold at night. Megee made his own primitive shelters and survived by drinking rainwater and eating small animals and available vegetation for nourishment. He was eventually discovered by a group of station hands near Katherine, Northern Territory, and taken to Darwin for medical assistance. Although some doubts were later raised as to the exact chain of events as Megee related them, the police did not find evidence that a criminal offence had occurred.

Ricky Megee
Nationality Australia

Early life

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Ricky Megee was born in 1970 or 1971 in Gippsland, Victoria; he later described his childhood as a happy one, until the family moved to Melbourne, where his father later killed himself. Megee worked at a variety of jobs. He was, variously, a carpet salesman, prawn fisherman, nightclub doorman, and an electrician. He eventually became a bailiff. Eventually, he went to jail after being involved in a fight in Perth,[1] as well as for drug offences.[2] In 2006 he was 35 years old[3] and living in Queensland.[4]

Journey to Port Hedland and attack

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Buntine Highway map
Map of the Buntine Highway

In January 2006[4] Megee had been offered work in a government department in Port Hedland,[3] Western Australia.[5] He accepted the job, and set off on the long drive, which he had made multiple times before.[6] Driving a 2001 Mitsubishi Challenger[3] he took the Buntine Highway, which for much of his journey was a desert track[2] across the outback of the Northern Territory.[3]

The events leading to Megee being stranded are somewhat confused, and indeed, Megee's version of how events unfolded changed significantly over time. He first told his rescuers that his car had broken down,[5] but then, The Washington Post reported, he claimed "that he had been drugged by hitchhikers and left for dead".[7] Megee later elaborated on how this scenario unfolded, saying he had picked up a lone Aboriginal[5] hitchhiker between the towns of Kalkaringi and Halls Creek. He believed that at some point the hitchhiker drugged Megee's drink.[4] Megee said that although he normally always opened his own drinks from the car refrigerator, on this occasion he allowed his passenger to open one for him.[1]

Later, in his 2010 autobiography,[8] Megee said that there had been three men sitting on the roadside, who had run out of petrol, and that he had offered to give one of them a lift to a petrol station.[1] Megee also posited that he could have been stabbed with a drugged-syringe during a struggle.[2] Either way, Megee later recalled feeling increasingly "dazed and confused", and then blacked out before he recovered consciousness hours later.[3] He also said that his attackers did not leave him immediately: they over-powered and stunned him. He later awoke in their camp. They had a gun, wrote Megee, but never used it; they did bring him water. After an unknown period, the carjackers lifted camp and disappeared.[1] Before they left, they stole his shoes,[9] but left him with $12.30 which had been in his pocket.[6]

When he regained consciousness, he said, he was in a hole, covered in black plastic, which had had "some rocks and dirt thrown on top".[3] Megee suggested that it was only the attempts by four[5] dingoes to claw him that woke him up.[3]

Journey across the desert

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I ate the leeches raw, straight out of the dam, grasshoppers I just ate them...But the only thing I really sort of had to cook was the frogs which (I) slipped onto a bit of wire and stuck the wire on top of my humpy, let the sun dry them out a fair bit until they were a bit crispy and then just ate them.

Ricky Megee talking to ABC Radio

Megee walked for ten days through the northeastern fringe of the Tanami Desert.[10] He often lost consciousness through heat exhaustion,[4] as temperatures regularly exceeded 40 °C (104 °F).[11] According to Mark Clifford, a local man who later witnessed Megee's arrival, although the temperatures were high, it was also the middle of the wet season during the time, which was in Megee's favour. When combined with the abundance of small wild animals and Megee's "hardy constitution", his chances of survival were, with hindsight, actually relatively good.[12] However, it was never clearly established precisely how Megee became as lost as he did.[3]

Megee said that he survived by eating leeches, insects,[7] snakes, ants and lizards,[1] and edible plants.[13] He drank water from "various dams and waterholes" and scavenged in the bush[3] every evening, eating "only one meal a day, just enough to stay alive".[4] When water was unavailable, he drank his urine after chilling it to suppress the flavour.[1]

Megee—"baked in the day and frozen at night"[13]—created temporary shelters from the sun out of old branches, and eventually found a decrepit windmill.[1] Megee said that he made "a little humpy[note 1] out of a feed trough that was at some cattle yards, obviously a mustering point, I thought to myself, so I've dragged it up on top of the dam, flipped it over and dug a hole and just lived in there for 10 weeks."[15] Megee became dangerously weak, to the extent that he was unable to travel as far on his daily foraging expeditions.[13] At one point he suffered an abscess of the tooth that—weakened as he was—could have been fatal,[11] and which he prised out of his mouth with his car keys.[6]

Rescue and recovery

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"It's a bit unclear what the trouble was with the car, and why he ended up off the road. He's walked for about 10 days to get to where he is before he's realised that he's got to set himself up some shelter and start trying to get some food into himself. He basically sat where he was for about 10 weeks.[10]

Mark Clifford, manager of the Birrindudu cattle station

Megee was eventually discovered about 50 kilometres (31 mi) from Birrindudu Station, about 500 kilometres (310 mi) southwest of Katherine, Northern Territory.[5] His rescuers were local station hands[3] and their trainees,[1] known as jackaroos.[10] By now, Megee was starving, sunburnt,[3] and suffering from malnutrition and exposure.[12] Birrindudu Station manager, Mark Clifford, described Megee as "just a walking skeleton!!!" when he was brought to the station,[4] and said that the area he was found in was one of the "most isolated places in Australia".[12]

On 5 April 2006[3] Megee was flown to the Royal Darwin Hospital,[4] where medical staff described him as "emaciated, but...well hydrated".[3] While in Darwin Hospital, Megee was interviewed by Northern Territory police, although they dismissed suggestions that there was any question of criminal activity on Megee's part.[3][4] Indeed, they said they were unable to find any evidence of criminality at all, or even Megee's stolen car.[12][10] Megee discharged himself from hospital after six days.[15]

Aftermath

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Royal Darwin Hospital
Royal Darwin Hospital, where Megee began his recovery

Megee's Challenger was never recovered,[3] and Megee himself lost 60 kilograms (130 lb),[3] or over half his original bodyweight,[4] which was over 100 kilograms (220 lb).[1]

The Sydney Morning Herald subsequently suggested that there were "some doubts" over elements of Megee's account, and reported that Megee was attempting to sell his story to "a commercial television station".[3] It was also reported that the police, too, initially "had doubts about the story because of Megee's previous minor drug convictions".[13] Megee refuted allegations that his account was in any way misleading and even offered to appear live on television and eat frogs to prove he was telling the truth.[2] ABC Radio reported that Megee had told his story to them for free—although only after trying, unsuccessfully, to persuade the station to match a A$15,000 offer he said he had received from elsewhere.[15] The doctor who treated Megee in Darwin commented that it was "very difficult to either deny or validate" his story, as he had responded so well to the treatment provided by dieticians, nutritionists and physicians.[4]

Bush Tucker Man Les Hiddins—considered an expert on outback survival[4]—acknowledged that Megee's survival was not as surprising as might have been thought. It was possible, he said, to survive in the bush for up to three years, and that "there are some areas where it's difficult to survive, and others where you can".[3] For example, the area where Megee was, Hiddins described as "dry country which is, you know, that's pretty severe country in there".[4] Other survival experts credit Megee's survival on his "instinctively solving the basic requirements of water, food and shelter—and adopting a survival mindset that pulled him through".[13]

Megee subsequently wrote a book on his experience and emigrated to Dubai[1] to work in construction.[16]

See also

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Note

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  1. ^ A humpy is described in the Dictionary of Australian Colloquialisms as "an Aboriginal bark hut [or] any rude shelter or hut".[14]

References

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Bibliography

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  • Allen and Unwin (2010). "Left For Dead: How I Survived 71 Days Lost in a Desert Hell / Ricky Megee and Greg McLean". Allen and Unwin. Archived from the original on 20 August 2018. Retrieved 20 August 2018.
  • BBC News (14 April 2006). "Outback 'skeleton' recalls ordeal". BBC. OCLC 33057671. Archived from the original on 29 July 2018. Retrieved 29 June 2018.
  • Colvin, M. (13 April 2006). "Drugged and abandoned in the outback: survivor claims". ABC News. Archived from the original on 29 July 2018. Retrieved 29 July 2018.
  • Humpy. Oxford. 2018. ISBN 9780195563160. Archived from the original on 29 July 2018. Retrieved 29 July 2018. {{cite book}}: |website= ignored (help)
  • "Left For Dead In The Outback". Hodder & Stoughton. 2009. Archived from the original on 29 July 2018. Retrieved 29 July 2018.
  • Jones, S. (14 April 2006). "Man tells of surviving 70 days in outback on diet of frogs and snakes". The Guardian. OCLC 614761493. Archived from the original on 29 July 2018. Retrieved 29 July 2018.
  • Kerin, L. (13 April 2006). "Man survives in desert by eating frogs and lizards". ABC Radio. OCLC 762244169. Archived from the original on 29 July 2018. Retrieved 29 July 2018.
  • Lamparska, J. (29 December 2012). "71 dni bez jedzenia na australijskiej pustyni". National Geographic Polska. National Geographic. Archived from the original on 29 July 2018. Retrieved 29 July 2018.
  • Mann, D.; Pezzullo, R. (2012). The U.S. Navy SEAL Survival Handbook: Learn the Survival Techniques and Strategies of America's Elite Warriors. New York: Skyhorse Publishing. ISBN 978-1-62087-393-9.
  • Megee, R.; McLean, G. (2008). Left For Dead: How I Survived 71 Days Lost in a Desert Hell. Crow's Nest, NSW: Allen & Unwin. ISBN 978-1-74176-939-5.
  • Polley, J. (2018). The Survival Manual. London: Hodder & Stoughton. ISBN 978-1-47367-490-5.
  • Rajok, A. (23 April 2009). "Desert challenge". Gulf News. Retrieved 29 July 2018.
  • Rupar, T.; Fisher, M. (4 January 2014). "Stranded: 9 amazing stories of survival against the odds". The Washington Post. Archived from the original on 8 September 2018. Retrieved 29 July 2018.
  • Squires, N. (14 April 2006a). "Lost man survives in Outback on raw frogs and leeches". The Telegraph. OCLC 6412514. Archived from the original on 29 July 2018. Retrieved 29 July 2018.
  • Squires, N. (17 April 2006b). "Police take closer look at claims of Outback 'survivor'". South China Morning Post. OCLC 39674929. Archived from the original on 29 July 2018. Retrieved 29 July 2018.
  • Sydney Morning Herald (14 April 2006). "Outback survivor's leech and frog diet". Sydney Morning Herald. Archived from the original on 29 July 2018. Retrieved 29 July 2018.