A group of bears charged a hiker in Alaska while she was lost. She was later found alive, but injured.

  • Fina Kiefer, 55, called her husband with news bears had charged her on an Alaskan hiking trail.

  • She said her bear spray stopped the animals but then stopped responding to her husband's messages.

  • A day later, state troopers and volunteers located an injured Kiefer a mile from the trail.

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A woman hiking Alaska's Pioneer Ridge Trail went missing but was later found injured after alerting her husband that a group of bears charged at her.

The husband of Fina Kiefer, 55, reported her missing to the Alaska Department of Public Safety at 1 a.m. on Tuesday.

Before he alerted officials, Kiefer was able to contact him, saying "multiple" bears charged her and she deterred them with bear spray. The 12-mile path she was hiking had a "hard" difficulty rating, and local officials mention the potential for bear and moose sightings on the area's website, CNN reported.

But after that initial call to her husband, Kiefer stopped responding, which prompted him to send a missing-person alert.

State troopers headed out to the trail in search of Kiefer, while the Alaska Air National Guard searched from the sky. When they found no traces of the woman, volunteers from the Alaska Mountain Rescue Group, Anchorage Nordic Ski Patrol, and Alaska Solstice Search Dogs joined in to help, according to the public-safety report.

After the mission was briefly halted when the weather became inclement Wednesday afternoon, a volunteer found Kiefer walking out of the woods. She was a mile from the trailhead.

Following the rescue, Kiefer was taken to a local hospital to receive treatment for undisclosed injuries, per the report.

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