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Aubrey Sacco disappeared during a planned 10-day hike in Nepal. Her parents are convinced the free-spirited 23-year-old is alive, and her father has vowed not to return from Southeast Asia until she is found.
By
TODAY.com contributor
updated 5/27/2010 10:27:15 AM ET 2010-05-27T14:27:15

Aubrey Sacco is no shrinking violet. The 2009 graduate of the University of Colorado with degrees in studio art and psychology is, in her own words, an artist, traveler and yogi. Her motto, expressed on her Web page, is “Make love to life.”

Late last year, the globe-trotting 23-year-old set off on a trek to India and the Himalayas. Starting with a stint as a yoga instructor at a resort in Sri Lanka, she eventually made her way to Nepal, where she set off on April 20 for a trek through Langtang National Park in the Himalayas. She planned to finish the hike by April 29 or 30.

She hasn’t been seen since. It is, her mother, Connie Sacco, told NBC News, “every parent’s nightmare.”

Traveling alone
The Greeley, Colo., mother said Aubrey checked in with park officials when she began the hike, but she never checked out of the park. Connie Sacco believes her daughter was hiking alone without a guide or porter. She did not make contact with her parents at the end of April as she had promised.

“She’s a free spirit. She’s an artist, she’s a yogi, she knows herself. She’s the strongest person I’ve ever known,” Connie told NBC in a report that aired Thursday on TODAY. “She’s my best friend in the world. She knows that, and I know she knows we’re trying to find her.”

Om Bahadur Rana, the police chief in the Rasuwa area, said police teams were searching the trekking route and interviewing inn owners and villagers. Word has been sent to local monasteries, which are often visited by foreign trekkers.

Rana said the teams are searching for clues up to 300 feet on either side of the mountain trail. Police sniffer dogs will also join the search, he said, adding that no one has reported seeing a woman meeting her description leave the area.

‘A big place’
The search was unable to begin sooner because mass protests on May 1 and a general strike imposed by Maoist former rebels shut down all transportation in Nepal until May 7.

Missing hiker Aubrey Sacco started off her Asian travels with a stint as a yoga instructor in Sri Lanka.
Thousands of Western backpackers visit during the spring season to hike in Nepal, home to dozens of popular mountain trails as well as Mount Everest, the world’s highest peak.

Aubrey’s father, attorney Paul Sacco, has flown to Katmandu to help with the search. Friends have created a Facebook page to keep Aubrey’s friends up to date on developments in the search.

The U.S. Embassy in Katmandu is also involved in trying to find a traveling companion that Aubrey may have met along the way. The Nepalese government is coordinating search efforts.

“The best way to find my daughter is to have all those people on the trail looking for her. Even though we have some good people, it doesn’t hurt to have numbers. It’s a big place,” Paul Sacco told NBC News.

Positive thoughts
Aubrey Sacco is an experienced traveler. According to ColoradoDaily.com, she had traveled to Panama, Japan and Asia under grants arranged by the University of Colorado.

TODAY
Aubrey Sacco is an experienced traveler and a free spirit, her parents say.
“She is incredibly courageous and a free spirit,” Paul Sacco told ColoradoDaily.

The father said he won’t come home until he finds his daughter. He’s hoping to find other trekkers who may have run across her during her travels. Both parents feel she is alive.

“I feel that she’s just lost, she’s just gotten off the trail and she’s just missing,” Connie Sacco said. “My gut is that she’s waiting for her father to come and get her.”

“She may not be lost, but there’s no communication,” Paul Sacco told The Associated Press. “It’s terrible. But what do you do? Do you wait a month? It’s so frustrating. Aubrey is a student of Eastern philosophy, and she firmly believes that positive thoughts from everyone will fix any problem, and I really believe that.”

The Associated Press contributed reporting to this story.

© 2012 MSNBC Interactive.  Reprints

Video: Family hunts missing daughter in Nepal

  1. Transcript of: Family hunts missing daughter in Nepal

    MEREDITH VIEIRA, co-host: Back now at 7:43. She went halfway around the world looking for fun and adventure, but now a 23-year-old from Colorado is missing in Nepal . And as NBC 's Janet Shamlian reports, her family is spearheading a massive search and rescue effort.

    JANET SHAMLIAN reporting: Aubrey Sacco graduated last year from the University of Colorado and headed to Southeast Asia in December. Her family says the cheerful 23-year-old had been loving every minute of her journey, studying yoga and meditation, taking photos and greeting strangers with an open heart.

    Ms. CONNIE SACCO (Aubrey's Mother): She's a free spirit. She's an artist. She's a yogi. She's the strongest person I've ever known.

    SHAMLIAN: Her travels took her to Nepal , trekking in the Himalayas . She was supposed to contact her parents on April 29th after a planned 10-day hike through Langtang National Park . She never made the call. Her mother, Connie , describes the uncertainty as every parent's nightmare, but says she's determined to stay strong and not give up hope.

    Ms. SACCO: She's my best friend in the world and she knows that. And I know she knows that we're, you know, trying to find her.

    SHAMLIAN: A massive search effort is under way, with expertise and resources coming from both the Nepalese government and private tour guide groups.

    Mr. PAUL SACCO (Aubrey's Father): The best way to find my daughter is to send those people out on the trail to look for her. And even though we have people out on the trail looking for her, some good people, it doesn't hurt, you know, to have numbers. It's a big place.

    SHAMLIAN: Aubrey 's father, Paul , is there now as well. He's vowed not to come home without her. She registered at two locations along this popular hiking route, but that's where her trail ends. Her family and the US Embassy are hoping to locate a traveling companion she may have met along the way, but so far have come up empty.

    Ms. SACCO: I feel she is just lost, she's just gotten off the trail and she's just missing. My gut is that she's waiting for her father to come and get her.

    SHAMLIAN: A young woman's search for adventure, now her family's heartache as they wait and search for any sign of her in the mountains of Nepal . For TODAY, Janet Shamlian , NBC News, Greeley, Colorado .

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