- GM's Agreement to Sell Saab Unit Falls Apart
- Consumer Confidence Improves but Still Shaky
- US Home Prices Up 5th Month, 2nd Straight Quarter
- FDIC Fund Falls into The Red, Bair Urges Lending
- Ron Paul's Plan to Audit Fed a 'Serious Attack': Mishkin
- Strong Banks, Weak Credit: Treasury Rethinks TARP
- Price War Brews Between Amazon and Wal-Mart
- Buyers Look For Bargains At Luxury Condo Auction
- Blog: Behind The Scenes With Warren Buffett
- Silicon Valley and Hollywood Now Fast Friends
- Markets Can Rise 5-10% in the Near-Term: Strategist
- Busch: The Debt-Interest Rate Paradox
- The Lloyd's Prayer, Leggo My Eggo, Plate Hate & Your Emails
- Buy These 'Competitively Positioned' Stocks: Portfolio Manager
- Behind The Scenes With Warren Buffett
- 'Why the American Consumer Will Keep on Buying No Matter What'
- On Assignment: Europe & Asia
- The L.A. Extravaganza: A Test for Auto Shows
- Women to make up one-third of new senior EU posts
- Aflac to exchange 2 Lloyds Banking securities
- New jobs for 2 SC counties with high unemployment
- Comtech Telecommunications receives $2.4M contract
- Cracker Barrel fiscal 1Q profit climbs 40 percent
- Maine single-family home sales rise in October
- MassEcon creates Web listing of business sites
- On the call: Bill Johnson CEO
- Smart Spending: When Black Friday is worth effort
IOWA CITY, Iowa - A 63-year-old woman trapped on a small raft caught in tangled river brush could hear passing cars and people talking but wasn't discovered until a fisherman on his way to his favorite hole spotted her five days later, the woman's son said Tuesday.
Jeanne Schnepp's odyssey began last week with a fishing trip on a tiny inflatable raft along the Wapsipinicon River. But when the Iowa woman found herself on raging waters that nearly flooded the banks, she partially deflated the raft and headed for the side.
Water masked the brush, which caught the raft and held it — and Schnepp — for five days before rescuers pulled her from the river Monday afternoon.
"She's always out doing something that she probably shouldn't have been doing," her son, Clint Schnepp, 33, said Tuesday. "Like this."
Even when the river receded, Jeanne Schnepp remained caught. The river banks grew farther away as Schnepp sank, trapped between a 12-foot wall of rocks and a logjam she couldn't climb over.
With only two cans of Mountain Dew and a bottle of water, Schnepp shouted herself hoarse. The brush was a couple hundred yards from a concrete bridge. Clint Schnepp said his mother could see cars driving over it.
So, she waited in just a tank-top and shorts, exposed to constant sun, two thunderstorms, hot days and cold nights. The brush was "out in the middle of nowhere," Clint Schnepp said, so passers-by were scant.
"She said, 'I heard the cars, I heard people talking,'" Clint Schnepp said. "She was in a place where 'no one could see me, no one could hear me.' If you weren't on that bank directly above her looking down, she was hidden."
Caught by a fisherman
Rescuers spent days in and out of the water near where Jeanne Schnepp had left her car, about a mile upstream. Her purse was there; her fishing gear was gone.
Clint and his brother Corey went out on the river in small boats, but struggled as their spotlights overheated and shut off. Worse, the Jones County sheriff's office's boat was out of commission.
After days with no sign, Schnepp's sons' search for their mother became a search for a body.
But as Jeanne Schnepp's luck would have it, she was caught near local angler Larry William's fishing hole.
"He just went out to go fishing, apparently he walked by the snag because he always fished that little eddy," Clint Schnepp said. "Out of the corner of his eye he thought he saw something, then he actually went back to check it out, and lo and behold.
"He said, 'Oh my God, you're that lady they've been looking for!'"
Jeanne Schnepp was sunburned, covered in bug bites and scratches, and severely dehydrated. But Clint Schnepp said his mother was on her feet Tuesday. She remained hospitalized, but was expected to be released within a couple of days.
"She's doing remarkably great," he said.
- Remember when auto shows were major events where new models could generate buzz?
- A diet high in fat and sugar might actually be good for your portfolio.
- A new McDonald's in Manhattan is the nation's first to sport a sleek, chic interior imported from stores in London and Paris.
- One shopper explains why he gets up at 3am on the day after Thanksgiving to go shopping every year.
- From the AIG&T to the Merrill Lychee, Jane Wells lists this year's holiday cocktails.
- For nearly three decades, these on-call experts have been dishing advice on how to – and not to – cook turkey.









