On the morning of 9 December 1975, von der Ropp, along with a group of four other tourists (three Britons and a German), set out from
Swakopmund,
Namibia, on an organized desert excursion with ''Charly's Atlantic Tours
to the Namib Desert near the Skeleton Coast. In the afternoon, the tour guide, driving a Land Rover, strayed off the unpaved route. By around 4 pm, the group realized that the guide was driving in concentric circles and had become hopelessly lost. Eventually, the vehicle broke down due to an overheated engine. Contrary to all desert survival rules, the guide decided to go on foot to seek help—partly because there was only enough fuel left for 50 kilometers, while the nearest gas station was in Swakopmund, 145 kilometers away. He hoped to find assistance at a mountain visible in the distance on the horizon, called Blutkuppe
. Out of solidarity and being the youngest member of the group, von der Ropp decided to accompany the guide for about an hour towards the supposed Blutkuppe'' before returning to the vehicle, where the other tourists remained. After they separated as agreed after an hour, both became lost. The guide discovered that the mountain they were heading toward was not
Blutkuppe but the desolate mountain known as
Backenzahn, while von der Ropp could no longer locate the abandoned vehicle. Further complicating the situation, the guide had left no information about their route in Swakopmund, and von der Ropp had set out without a shirt or hat. A large-scale search operation followed, conducted by the
South African Defence Force and led by Major Peter Stark, who later detailed the events in his book
The White Bushman. After 92 hours without food or water, von der Ropp was finally rescued from the Namib Desert by a search team on 13 December 1975, at 12:45 p.m. local time and was flown by helicopter to the hospital in Swakopmund. In a medical report dated 23 December 1975, Dr. Werner Zöllner noted that von der Ropp suffered from "severe dehydration" and "a mild sunburn." The events of December 1975 were featured in the BBC documentary series
Ray Mears'
Extreme Survival, Season 3, Episode 4, "Namibia" (starting at 30:10). == Volunteering ==