Remembering a little boy lost
The Oregonian
Portland, Oregon
November 23, 2006
By MATTHEW PREUSCH
Crater Lake – Samuel Boehlke’s parents share their grief and what they’re thankful for today.
After a year of grief piled upon grief, including the loss of her son, there’s one thing Kirsten Becker is still thankful for today.
“For the gift,” she said, “of Sam’s life.”
Becker’s 8-year-old boy, Samuel Boehlke, disappeared last month in Crater Lake National Park.
This week Becker and Sammy’s father, Kenneth Boehlke, spoke at length for the first time about losing their son and the difficulty of their first holiday season without him.
“The things that are special about Thanksgiving are the fact that it’s a celebration of the warmth of home and hearth and the heart of the family,” Becker said. “And this year the heart that held our family together is gone.”
The Portland couple, who divorced in 2005, kept out of the public eye after Sammy vanished into the woods north of Crater Lake while on a trip to the park with his father.
They’re coming forward now in part to thank those involved in the search for their son, but also with recognition that people from across the country closely followed the search for Sammy and wanted to know more about him.
“When one child is lost it touches everyone,” said Becker, 46, a manager at a Portland real estate investment company. “So this is not just a private tragedy, this is a community tragedy, and it touches everyone with a very heavy hand.”
Becker, who is working on a eulogy for a memorial planned for Saturday, said that at Thanksgiving dinner Sammy always declined mashed potatoes and salad, focusing on turkey and his grandmother’s hot rolls.
“He would devour them,” Becker said.
Sammy had a passionate personality, bordering on stubborn. His joys were as deep as his disappointments, Becker said. He also had a mild form of autism, which manifested itself in a fear of loud noises and bright lights.
That complicated the work of the more than 200 search-and-rescue workers who arrived at Crater Lake after Sammy’s disappearance on Oct.14 and couldn’t use the customary air horns or whistles.
The boy and his father had stopped to play on a cinder slope where Sammy saw some yellow he hoped might be gold. As darkness approached and his dad walked a short distance to the car so the two could return to their rented cabin near Diamond Lake, Sammy stayed on the slope, refusing to come down.
Kenneth Boehlke chased up after him, he said, but Sammy, likely thinking it was a game, stayed 50 feet ahead.
“I never caught up with him, and at that point he disappeared over the top somewhere and I lost him,” said Boehlke, 48.
For a week, National Park Service searchers and others scoured the area with dogs, helicopters and heat-sensing cameras, but no trace of the boy was found. Intermittent searching continued until this month when snow started falling.
During the search, the couple were cooped up in a duplex near park headquarters getting briefings twice daily from search commanders, but they weren’t allowed to help because search managers didn’t want dogs to be thrown off by their scent.
“I still would rather have gone,” Boehlke said. “Basically you’re just stuck there waiting.”
Becker said she’s raised more than $6,000 in a fund set up at U.S. Bank that she will use to reimburse some of the expenses of volunteer searchers and hire a tracker next summer to continue the hunt.
“I need evidence (of Sammy) for the final grieving process to occur,” she said.
Any money left over will go toward a scholarship to send children with disabilities to Portland Parks & Recreation summer camps, where Sammy was always happy, she said.
For Becker, the loss of her son wasn’t the only tragedy this year.
The boy’s disappearance came just a few months after the death of her father, Herman Becker, and a close friend. Her dog, Simba, and cat, Killer, also died.
Still Becker laughs out loud as she describes an exuberant phone message that Sammy left her from school last June describing what a good day he was having earning smiley-face stickers from the teacher and playing with his friends.
“That message was important to me before he was lost,” she said, “and now it’s precious.”
Matthew Preusch: 541-382-2006; preusch@bendbroadband.com
Other pages in this section
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- Brian Smith plans to answer call of world’s highest peak – December 31, 2006
- Survey says: Snow level ‘nearly normal’ – December 29, 2006
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- Under proposal, Crater Lake entry fees would double – December 22, 2006
- Oregon Neutral In Shift From National Parks – December 15, 2006
- Big fee hikes at national parks are a bit too big – December 21, 2006
- Proposal would increase Crater Lake fees – December 18, 2006
- America’s Largest Bald Eagle Festival is President’s Day Weekend 2007 in the Klamath Basin of South Central Oregon – December 19, 2006
- Since You Asked: how much snow does Crater Lake get each winter? – December 14, 2006
- Volunteers become Park Service’s public face – November 28, 2006
- Pacific Crest Trail journey is a repeat performance – November 28, 2006
- Memorial Service Scheduled for Boy, 8, Lost at Crater Lake – November 18, 2006
- See old-growth, National Creek Falls on short trail – November 17, 2006
- Pine Beetles Can Set Stage for Disastrous Forest Fires – November 6, 2006
- Mom hopes to use dogs to find son – October 25, 2006
- Search for boy winds down – October 21, 2006
- Ceremony honors missing 8-year-old – October 21, 2006
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- Searchers scour woods in vain – October 19, 2006
- Crater Lake Highway Renamed – October 18, 2006
- ‘Frustrating’ search – October 18, 2006
- Boulders, brush and bravery, but no boy – October 18, 2006
- Missing boy faces snow, wind – October 17, 2006
- Searchers continue to look for Portland boy missing near Crater Lake – October 17, 2006
- Snow slows search for boy missing at Crater Lake – October 17, 2006
- Massive search underway for Portland boy missing at Crater Lake – October 16, 2006
- Boy still missing at Crater Lake – October 16, 2006
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- ‘The Good Fire’ – September 25, 2006
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- Roving the Floor of Crater Lake – August 21, 2006
- Weather makes firefighters work harder – August 20, 2006
- Found in the ashes – August 20, 2006
- Crater Lake due for odd visitor – August 18, 2006
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