Best Friend Of Yellowstone Hiker Missing A Week Waits At Camp, Desperate For News

Desmond McGroarty, lifelong best friend of missing Yellowstone hiker Austin King, isĀ desperately hoping heā€™s found alive. Heā€™sĀ at the concessions village where they'd both been working, eager for any news.

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Clair McFarland

September 24, 20243 min read

Austin King has been missing since summiting Eagle Peak in Yellowstone National Park on Sept. 17.
Austin King has been missing since summiting Eagle Peak in Yellowstone National Park on Sept. 17. (National Park Service)

The 22-year-old concession worker who vanished last week after summiting Yellowstone National Parkā€™s highest peak is an amateur mountaineer whoā€™d been talking about theĀ climbĀ for weeks, his best friend told Cowboy State Daily.

In sleet and fog last Tuesday,Ā Sept. 17,Ā Austin King summitted Eagle Peak and called family and friends, elated,Ā from the top of the mountain.

One of the people King called was Desmond McGroarty, 22, his friend since kindergarten.

When King went to work as a concession employee in Yellowstone National Park in June, McGroarty decided to join him two months later.

ā€œHe was super ecstatic,ā€ McGroarty told Cowboy State Daily on Monday. ā€œHe did say his hands were cold and stuff, but it sounded like he just didnā€™t care, because he was so excited he made it to the top.ā€

Crumbling

The top is 11,361 feet above sea level on a mountain known for its brittle and shifting footholds.

King, who works in a dining hall, had been telling his friends about the trip for weeks. Heā€™s an amateur mountaineer but very athletic. He competes in triathlons and hikes frequently, McGroarty said.

ā€œHeā€™s never done something like (Eagle Peak),ā€ said McGroarty. ā€œHe showed everybody his plan (that) he wrote out on paper.ā€

His friends would tell him it didnā€™t seem like a great idea to go alone, but nobody wanted to push back too hard because King was so passionate about theĀ climbĀ and eager to win the experience for himself.

ā€œHe can be really determined on things he wants,ā€ McGroarty said. Ā 

King was due to board a boat Friday and head back to his RV in the Grant Village areaĀ in the park. He never showed up, YNP announced Sunday.

At first light Saturday, ground, drone and aerial searchers converged on the area. They found Kingā€™s camp in the Howell Creek area.

Kingā€™s sleeping bag was not there, McGroarty related from talks heā€™s had with authorities.

Back at the village, McGroarty has been stressed and frantic, though it helped when Kingā€™s family arrived in the park early this week, he said.

Humble Though

Despite all his athleticism, King is humble, laid-back and easy to be around, McGroarty said.

He loves the outdoors and nature, McGroarty said, addingĀ that it is not in his nature to go rogue on purpose.

More thanĀ 20 ground searchers, two helicopters, unmanned air systems, and a search dog team were focusing efforts nearĀ Eagle Peak on Tuesday, YNP reported. Anyone traveling in the backcountry near Eagle PeakĀ since Sept.14 may have seen King. Ā 

Anyone with information regarding his whereabouts should contact the Yellowstone Interagency Communications Center at 307.344.2643, the statement says.Ā King stands 6-foot tall, weighs about 160 pounds, has brown hair, hazel eyes, wears glasses and was last wearing a black sweatshirt and grey pants.

Contact Clair McFarland at clair@cowboystatedaily.com

  • Austin King has been missing since summiting Eagle Peak in Yellowstone National Park on Sept. 17.
    Austin King has been missing since summiting Eagle Peak in Yellowstone National Park on Sept. 17. (National Park Service)
  • Austin King and Eagle Peak 9 24 24

Clair McFarland can be reached at clair@cowboystatedaily.com.

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Clair McFarland

Crime and Courts Reporter