Edmonton

Melting snow brings new hope as search for missing Alberta man enters 5th week

Five weeks after her son seemingly vanished in B.C., his mom doesn't hold much hope he will be found alive. Nonetheless, Heather Shtuka is determined that her son Ryan will be found.

'I know the likelihood of him surviving is next to none,' says Ryan Shtuka's mom

The mother of 20-year-old Ryan Shtuka, who went missing in Sun Peaks, B.C., five weeks ago, says hopes are slim that he is still alive. (Kamloops RCMP)

Five weeks after her son left a house party in B.C. and seemingly vanished, his mom doesn't hold much hope that he will be found alive.

Nonetheless, Heather Shtuka is determined to keep searching for son Ryan until the mystery of his disappearance is solved.

With sunshine and warmer temperatures at Sun Peaks Resort near Kamloops, volunteers — including more than 40 who were bused in from Alberta on Friday —  continue to look for any clue of the 20-year-old, last seen in the early morning of Feb. 17.

"Five weeks in, I know the likelihood of him surviving is next to none," Heather Shtuka told CBC News. "[We believe] he just got caught up in the elements and we just can't find him."

Ryan, who lived in Beaumont, Alta., worked the winter season at Sun Peaks. He moved there in December to work as a lift operator at the resort.

When he failed to show up for work on Feb. 18, his parents drove through the night to assist in the search and rescue efforts.

"The snow we are looking in is 14 feet in height. And there are tree wells and the terrain is uneven. And there are so many places that someone could slip and slide down and would be covered by snow," Shtuka said.

Ryan Shtuka was last seen leaving a party in the early hours of Feb. 17. (RCMP)

"We'll stay until all the snow has melted, because there's no indication that he has left this hill at all. So we don't go until we find him."

Shtuka said she's grateful to the friends and strangers, about 200 in all, who have helped so far in the search.

Hopes were high among this weekend's crew, many of which came out from Beaumont, and Shtuka could see their disappointment when he wasn't found.

She still calls the weekend's efforts a success, saying it allowed them to conclusively strike certain areas off the search list "and we haven't been able to do that for maybe three weeks now.

"We try to find blessings every day. Because if we don't, than this entire thing is just a tragedy and I refuse to believe that my son's life up until now has been anything other than a blessing."

RCMP continue to investigate Shtuka's disappearance.