The forest behind his home was unforgiving—dense wilderness stretching for miles, home to bears, mountain lions, and terrain that could swallow a small child without a trace.
So when Ryker went missing, the response was immediate and overwhelming.
Search teams flooded the area. More than 50 people combed through the woods on ATVs, drones scanned from above, and helicopters cut through the growing storm clouds. As night fell, the weather worsened. Rain poured, temperatures dropped, and visibility collapsed. Still, there was no sign of him.
Hours turned into days.
Then came a small but meaningful clue: overturned rocks along a trail. It was something only a child would do. Ryker loved bugs, investigators learned, and often wandered while flipping stones, curious about what might be underneath. That detail redirected the search deeper into the forest.
On the second day, hope returned in the most unexpected place.
A couple living near the edge of the woods heard a faint sound coming from their shed. At first, they dismissed it as an animal. But the noise continued—soft, weak, unmistakably human. When they opened the door, they discovered Ryker curled inside a lawnmower bag.
He was alive.
Rescuers arrived within minutes, and the moment he was carried out, relief swept through everyone on scene. The sheriff later described him as feeling “light as a bird” in his arms.
After days of fear, the forest finally gave something back.