A teenager’s kayak flipped and his brother jumped in to help. Now they’re both missing - row row row your kayak

Two teenage brothers have been missing for over a week in California after one of their kayaks flipped during a duck hunting trip.

Wesley and Andruw Cornett, 17 and 19 respectively, were last heard from on December 14 during their trip to Thermalito Afterbay in Butte County. On Monday, authorities announced that they were scaling back searches.



According to the Butte County Sheriff’s Office, 911 dispatch received a call from Andruw around 8:30 a.m. on the day of the incident, saying that his brother’s kayak had overturned.

He told officers he was going to jump in to save his brother after being advised “multiple times” not to get in the water. Neither boy was wearing a life jacket.

Wesley Cornett, 17, left, and Andruw Cornett, 19, right, have been missing since December 14 after going out on a duck hunt



Wesley Cornett, 17, left, and Andruw Cornett, 19, right, have been missing since December 14 after going out on a duck hunt (Butte County Sheriff's Office)
Thermalito Afterbay is a 4,300-acre lake with weeds up to 10 feet tall and temperatures that threaten hypothermia, according to the Sheriff’s Office.

First responders arrived within 15 minutes of the initial call and located the kayak but not the teenagers. About 20 minutes later, a kayak, paddles and waders were found, but the boys were nowhere to be seen.

In a statement on Monday — the 10th day of the search — BCSO said it was shifting the focus to a “continuous limited search.” Over the course of the search divers located Andruw’s pants, Wesley’s wallet and jacket with his phone inside.


“At this point in the recovery, we have exhausted efforts with divers and sonar technology and will shift the focus to a continuous limited search,” the statement said. “This involves surface search methods, which includes aircrafts, drones, boats, on-shore vehicles, and K9s.”

Mass searches involving 20 different agencies were scaled down on Monday after 10 days of searching for the brothers



Mass searches involving 20 different agencies were scaled down on Monday after 10 days of searching for the brothers (Butte County Sheriff’s Office)
Around 280 team members from 21 different agencies had previously been involved in the search.

“Thousands of acres have been searched by boat, by ground and by raft,” said Trevor Skaggs, with the Sheriff Office’s search and rescue team, in a video shared by the Sheriff’s Office.

In a post on GoFundMe, April Clark, the boys’ mother, said Andrew was a “hero in my eyes” for trying to save his brother.

“The Sheriff is saying this is now a search and recovery so I will have to also plan to lay my two boys to rest,” she wrote. “This is a freak accident that my family and I are trying to wrap our heads around and we also have 4 girls at home who we still need to care for.”

“This is hard for me to write as I’m beyond broken into so many pieces.”

 
Screenshot 2024-12-27 012345.png
I think they're confused as to whether it's Andrew or Andruw because the mother might have misspelled it on the gofundme.

Over the course of the search divers located Andruw’s pants, Wesley’s wallet and jacket with his phone inside.
That sounds like paradoxical undressing from hypothermia, which means they are certainly dead. Tragic thing, and to happen so close after Christmas.
 
He told officers he was going to jump in to save his brother after being advised “multiple times” not to get in the water.
Years ago I had to do a swift water rescue training course. The very first thing they do is teach you not to do this and then proceed to make you watch a shit ton of videos showing people drowning and dying doing exactly that. You will almost always end up being pulled under and becoming a victim yourself. You don't realize how powerful water is until you end up in that situation. It just takes a second and it can overpower you and you're fucking done. When we did the rescue exercises, even wearing dry suits, being tied off with a rope and working with multiple people, it was a fucking struggle to bring people back in from the water. I remember at the end of every day of that we were all just exhausted. We'd get back to camp, eat dinner and just go to bed.
 
Kayaks are no joke.
I've tipped canoes multiple times, and you end up free in the water feeling like a moron. But you aren't trapped in the damn thing. Many kayaks tip easily and trap your legs when you start panicing upside down.

And it you're thinking, "But I won't panic, I'll...blah blah blah" Well, a whole lot of dead people thought the same thing. It happens so fast and then you're upside down in cold, dark water.
Same reason I skate but don't snowboard.
Never try snowboarding for the first time when you're well into adulthood. I can't believe I didn't rip my knees to the point of needing surgery the first AND ONLY time I tried snowboarding. Your feet are locked to the board, and you flip down the mountain like a stiff retard. That's cool when you're 12 yrs old, but not when your knees can't take it.
 
If you're on a boat/kayak/whatever, wear a fucking life jacket. Don't care if you can swim like Mark Spitz, the water can be a treacherous place. Would go even further - if you are on certain terrain next to the ocean wear a life jacket. In our area, we get people swept off rocks all the time. One was the 18-year-old son of a doctor I know; he was their only child. Had another erased a few days ago. I stay the fuck away from that shit.
 
If you're on a boat/kayak/whatever, wear a fucking life jacket. Don't care if you can swim like Mark Spitz, the water can be a treacherous place. Would go even further - if you are on certain terrain next to the ocean wear a life jacket. In our area, we get people swept off rocks all the time. One was the 18-year-old son of a doctor I know; he was their only child. Had another erased a few days ago. I stay the fuck away from that shit.

Ocean swimming, too. There are some very flexible, easy to wear life jackets now. It's dumb to do any kind of open water swimming, especially in areas with no lifeguards, if you don't have a PFD. The rescue guys have plenty of time to help you if you're caught in a rip current and swept out while you've got a PFD on. I'm always shocked by tourist parents who let their newly-swimming kids go out into ocean waves on non-lifeguarded public beaches. They just don't get how powerful water can be. You have absolutely no choice in where you are headed when the wave is big enough or the current strong enough.
 
This is a freak accident that my family and I are trying to wrap our heads around and we also have 4 girls at home who we still need to care for.”

This line from the GFM presumably written by the mother seems odd.

It's probably factual, but also has a "Women are the real victims of war" feel.

It might have been written to garner sympathy to increase payouts.

It also crossed my mind that it could've framed as justification for giving up the search. But I'm sure the GFM text predates the SAR op wrapping up.

I think they're confused as to whether it's Andrew or Andruw because the mother might have misspelled it on the gofundme.

When I first saw the "Andruw" spelling, I assumed they were black.

Then I doubted myself that they drowned duck hunting.
 
Aren't there supposed to have kayak survival classes on how to right yourself if you flip over? I'd not be comfy getting into one without at least knowing what to do if that happened.
 
Back