The senior with Alzheimer’s had wandered away from his home on a winter day, and his family was frantic. Thankfully, a heroic trooper found him when he did.
Winters in Maine are known to be very cold, snowy, and wet.
Temperatures during the day can be as low as 12 degrees F, which makes it quite uncomfortable to move around, especially for elderly citizens.
Last year, an 82-year-old man went missing in the heart of winter, when temperatures were at their lowest, and the whole state was covered in snow.
The elderly man, who also suffers from Alzheimer’s disease, left his home and started wandering in the snow-covered streets around his property in Vassalboro, Maine.
When the man was spotted wandering away from home, the local police were called in order to help find the senior and help him return home safely.
In fact, it was a plow truck driver who saw him first and they waved at each other.
The driver thought that the man was fine since he waved at him.
82-year-old Bernard Perry is known to wave at everybody, so this wouldn’t have caused any worries normally, but at 5 am in the morning, in such cold weather, it was clear that the man needed help.
“Mr. Perry is a waver,” one of the man’s neighbors told CBS News. “He’s a great guy, always smiling and waving,” the woman added.
So, early in the morning on that cold December day, Trooper Tyler Harrington started searching for the missing senior, starting from the spot where he had last been seen by the plow truck driver.
He shined his flashlight towards the roadside, and thankfully, spotted the missing man in a ditch.
Since the elderly Alzheimer’s patient could not walk, Trooper Harrington carefully scooped him up and carried him to the police car
So, early in the morning on that cold December day, Trooper Tyler Harrington started searching for the missing senior, starting from the spot where he had last been seen by the plow truck driver.
He shined his flashlight towards the roadside, and thankfully, spotted the missing man in a ditch.
Since the elderly Alzheimer’s patient could not walk, Trooper Harrington carefully scooped him up and carried him to the police car
“It was still dark, I’d shine my light off the roadway, and there Mr. Perry was,” Trooper Harrington told CBS News. “The road was so icy; I didn’t want to fall with him in my arms,” Harrington added.
The trooper took the elderly man into the police car and waited with him until an ambulance arrived.
Soon, the first responders came and took Perry into an ambulance and drove him to the nearest hospital.