It was mid-October 2018 when Eric Spencer was last seen in Honey Harbour.
A full-scale search by the OPP for the then 60-year-old from Thornbury scaled back when the search came up empty.
Then reignited one year later, with no trace of Spencer anywhere, Spencer’s sister got in touch with the non-profit group “Please Bring Me Home.”
“When Eric entered those woods, there has been no other evidence to suggest that he exited those woods,” said Nick Oldrieve, executive director of Please Bring Me Home.
Six volunteers entered Honey Harbour on Sunday following a creek near where Spencer was last seen.
A search was encumbered.
“The swampiest area that we’ve ever been in. So every two feet you step out, you’re in another, you know, another swampy area,” said Oldrieve.
The team devised a plan to stay on the perimeter, hoping that his body would have likely drifted out after six years.
Then, at 10:30 that morning, “We were at the northmost end of this swamp just kind of turning around to come around the other side. And we had located what was clearly human remains at the time,” said Oldrieve.
Police were alerted to the situation and brought in to retrieve the remains.
Investigators unable to confirm the identity at this time.
“Postmortem obviously has been scheduled to be conducted at a future date and to assist in determining the cause of death and to confirming the identity,” said Dave Hobson with the Southern Georgian Bay OPP.
It is still unclear when the postmortem will take place, leaving Spencer’s family in a state of limbo.