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The Honolulu Advertiser

Updated at 11:48 a.m., Friday, January 3, 2003

Fire crews rejoin family in search for missing hiker

By Rod Ohira
and Scott Ishikawa
Advertiser Staff Writers

Before the start of today's search for missing hiker George Y. "Cowboy" Morishima, his son talked about a "gut feeling."

"My gut feeling is we're going to find him today," Gary Morishima said. "It's a gut feeling. I think we're close."

Gary Morishima and a handful of relatives and friends started their search today at 8:30 a.m. They were assisted by Hawaiian Trail and Mountain Club volunteers as well as five Honolulu Fire Department rescue specialists.

The rescue specialists, assigned by Fire Chief Attilio Leonardi, were sent today to an area that had not been searched before. They helped family members for about an hour.

Family and friends, meanwhile, were back in the thick foliage for a fifth straight day.

"We've searched a lot of areas but we're going to concentrate now on the lower side," Morishima said. "I think my father came down the mountain looking for his bag. We think he slipped, fell and hit his head and got disoriented and fell again."

Morishima said he'll continue searching because other than the mesh bag containing two bamboo shoots, no one has found other belongings of the missing hiker.

"If he slipped and fell, we should have found a cap or something," Morishima said. "Not knowing is very difficult."

Mabel Kekina of the Hawaiian Trail and Mountain Club has told the family that the organization is calling on its membership to assist in a search over the weekend, Morishima said.

Fire-resuce crews had called off their search for Morishima around 1 p.m. yesterday after scouring through hundreds of acres in Nu'uanu Valley since Sunday.

The 78-year-old 'Aiea resident and avid hiker has been missing for more than four days since he drove to Nu'uanu to look for bamboo shoots and pepeiao, or black tree fungus, for traditional Japanese New Year's food dishes. Morishima was last seen at nightfall Sunday by other hikers venturing a steep, unmarked trail above Judd Trail.

But while his family is frustrated by his disappearance, clues and sightings of Morishima have them clinging to hope that the athletic man may be hurt, but still alive in the thick foliage below the Nu'uanu Lookout. Fire crews, which usually call off search efforts for a missing person after three days, decided to look for a fourth day after Morishima's green mesh bag containing two takenoko, or bamboo shoots, were found Wednesday along one of the trails. Honolulu fire officials called off their search at 1 p.m. yesterday after failing to come across any other signs of Morishima.

About 25 family members and friends of Morishima waited yesterday afternoon near the entrance of Judd Trail along Nu'uanu Pali Road for fire-rescue specialists hunting for clues. Three rescue specialists were flown by helicopter at 9 a.m. to a ridgeline about 1,700 feet above the staging area on Nu'uanu Pali Road. The trio rappelled into a ravine and searched as they hiked out, Soo said.

But when the three fire crew members walked out of the forest area empty-handed shortly before 1 p.m., officials suspended their search. Soo said search crews covered hundreds of acres in about a half-square mile area since Sunday.

"We sent the men into the area again because he dropped his mesh bag, and we speculated whether he dropped it before heading up the ridge, or coming down," Soo said. "We didn't want to leave any scenarios untouched."

Morishima has been known to go off-trail to look for the bamboo shoots, which made search efforts difficult, Soo said. Some of the unmarked trails were along steep cliffsides, and firefighters had to rappel down to see if Morishima may have fallen.

Gary Morishima and his wife, Tina, thanked fire and police personnel, as well as volunteers involved in the rescue efforts.

"The Fire Department search and rescue and police have done a tremendous job, and my hat is off to everyone involved," said Gary Morishima. "We want to thank all of the volunteers who donated time, food and refreshments. We're really touched by all of the support from the community, which is really part of Hawai'i: the 'ohana."

When other hikers last saw Mo rishima at 5:45 p.m. Sunday, he was wearing a white button-down shirt, baseball pants and a baseball cap and was carrying a machete, officials said. Other hikers say they did not see Morishima carrying a canteen or a bag with food.

The latest clue ­ Morishima's mesh bag with the bamboo shoots inside ­ makes his disappearance even more puzzling because the area where his bag was discovered was far from bamboo thickets and from the stream where he could collect pepeiao off trees.

Morishima appeared to be on an unmarked pig hunter's trail where uluhe, or false staghorn fern, is waist high.

"I'm kind of thinking why is he high on the ridge?" Kekina said. "He has no reason to be there if he's looking for bamboo shoots and pepeiao. They are on the lower side of the valley. It would make more sense if he stayed along the stream around Jackass Ginger (Pool)."