ManitobaA group from a northern Ontario First Nation paused their search for a missing Norwegian trekker in a remote part of northern Manitoba on Tuesday, citing mounting costs, while RCMP say they have their eyes on the fast-moving Hayes River.Steffen Skjottelvik, 29, didn’t arrive as expected in York Factory after leaving Fort Severn, Ont., on July 25Bryce Hoye · CBC News · Posted: Aug 19, 2025 9:00 PM EDT | Last Updated: 4 hours agoSteffen Skjottelvik is seen in an undated Facebook image. He left Fort Severn, Ont., on foot on July 25 with his two dogs and the intention to arrive in York Factory, Man., on Aug. 15, but he did not arrive as scheduled. (Steffen Skjottelvik/Facebook)A group from a northern Ontario First Nation paused their search for a missing Norwegian trekker in a remote part of northern Manitoba on Tuesday, citing mounting costs, while RCMP say they have their eyes on the fast-moving Hayes River.Steffen Skjottelvik, 29, never arrived at his destination of York Factory, Man., where he was expected after leaving on foot with his two dogs from Fort Severn, Ont., late last month. One of the dogs showed up at York Factory, which got people worried.The coastal land between the two, consisting of soggy muskeg, is home to polar bears and wolves.”People think that Steffen shouldn’t have been doing that but we all make … mistakes and we’re all human beings and that’s what we look at it from,” Fort Severn First Nation Chief Matthew Kakekaspan told CBC News on Tuesday.”He’s a human being and he needs our help…. He’s somebody’s child.”Kakekaspan said searchers from his community were forced to pull out Tuesday morning. In the 2½ days they searched, the group incurred $70,000 in helicopter rental costs, something they could not sustain any longer, said Kakekaspan.Skjottelvik aimed to travel from James Bay to Alaska, according to a Facebook page documenting the journey called Steffen’s Great Canadian Journey.Left Fort Severn on July 25Police have said Skjottelvik is considered an experienced wilderness traveller. RCMP and Kakekaspan have also said the terrain in the area, and the threat from wildlife, make his planned trek path dangerous.Skjottelvik left Fort Severn on foot on July 25 with his two dogs and was expected to arrive in York Factory last Friday — a 300-kilometre distance over a three-week timeline.He arrived in Nanuk camp, about 40 kilometres from York Factory, on Aug. 13 and said he had lost one of his dogs along the way, according to RCMP.Skjottelvik last touched base with a contact in York Factory on Aug. 14, saying he expected to arrive on Aug. 15.RCMP Sgt. Paul Manaigre previously said one of Skjottelvik’s dogs may have been lost in an attack by wolves. But someone from Fort Severn has posted images on Facebook of a husky resembling one of Skjottelvik’s dogs that wandered into that community on Monday.On Tuesday, Manaigre said the search thus far has been by boat, drone and helicopters because of the treacherous boggy terrain.He said on Tuesday the police force has one Mountie in the area presently.An RCMP officer flew a drone Monday night equipped with thermal imaging capabilities to look for hot spots that could be Skjottelvik, said Manaigre.Focus on Hayes RiverHe said Manitoba Conservation is in the area with a helicopter conducting aerial searches to complement efforts by local searchers, including a man from Gillam, Man., who is familiar with the area and is searching by boat, and those from Fort Severn who have since left.Manaigre said on Tuesday there was a focus on the Hayes River, one of the fastest-flowing in Canada.”It’s just an extremely hazardous river to cross and basically with all the rain coming everything is going into the bay right now so that current was extremely swift,” said Manaigre.”It is highly suspected” that Skjottelvik may have tried to cross to an island that is about one kilometre out from the shoreline, and that island is about another kilometre or more from the other side of the river, said Manaigre.”If there’s low waters you can technically navigate it by foot, but the tide does swing up and down … four metres,” said Manaigre.”We actually had one of the searchers in hip waders today, tethered, trying to just see if he could walk in the river and he wasn’t able to stand. It’s just the current, it’s just too strong.”RCMP initially said the Canada Rangers were requested to attend, but they decided against it because “it was just too dangerous.””You need some very experienced people to be going through this terrain, it’s basically muskeg bog…. It’s almost up to your waist. It’s just soft,” Manaigre said.”We don’t have a lot of resources up in play just due to the logistics involved,” he said. “That’s probably been the biggest challenge of this is just due to the remoteness, the dangers with polar bears and wolves.”Kakekaspan said Skjottelvik’s family back in Norway are trying to raise money, some of which would help Fort Severn cover the costs it has already incurred in the search.He also thinks RCMP have not responded with sufficient resources quickly enough based on the harsh terrain and urgent nature of the search for Skjottelvik.”It is treacherous, but somebody should go, somebody needs to go, and the RCMP are the ones who need to spearhead it,” Kakekaspan said.ABOUT THE AUTHORBryce Hoye is a multi-platform journalist with a background in wildlife biology. He has worked for CBC Manitoba for over a decade with stints producing at CBC’s Quirks & Quarks and Front Burner. He was a 2024-25 Knight Science Journalism Fellow at MIT. He is also Prairie rep for outCBC. He has won a national Radio Television Digital News Association award for a 2017 feature on the history of the fur trade, and a 2023 Prairie region award for an audio documentary about a Chinese-Canadian father passing down his love for hockey to the next generation of Asian Canadians.Selected storiesEmail: bryce.hoye@cbc.caFacebookMore by Bryce HoyeWith files from Alexandre Silberman