British teen survives 3 days in Outback: How'd he do it?

In this Feb. 15, 2013 photo, British teen Sam Derry-Woodhead, second left, sits in a rescue helicopter as he is tended to by ambulance personnel, near Upshot Station, a cattle ranch 55 miles from Longreach, Australia. / AP Photo/Angus Emmott
CANBERRA, Australia A British teenage backpacker drank contact lens fluid and his own urine to survive three days lost in Australian Outback scrubland in oppressive summer heat, his mother said Saturday.
Claire Derry reached the bedside of her 18-year-old son, Sam Derry-Woodhead, on Saturday at Longreach Hospital in northeast Australia, where he is recovering from dehydration.
She said she feared the worst while flying from London's Heathrow Airport to Longreach until she was told during a stopover in the east coast city of Brisbane that searchers in a helicopter had winched her son to safety on Friday.
"He'd survived on fluid from contact lenses and his own urine," Derry told Ten Network TV. He was sunburned and had lost 33 pounds, she said.
Derry-Woodhead, who's from Richmond upon Thames, outside London, became lost in scrubland while jogging Tuesday near Upshot Station, a cattle ranch 55 miles from Longreach.
He had been working at the ranch for less than two weeks as a novice cowboy known in Australia as a jackaroo.
Temperatures reached 104 Fahrenheit as around 50 searchers scoured the rugged terrain over three days. Two searchers received medical treatment for heat stroke.
Alex Wright, who was part of the crew that rescued Derry-Woodhead, said they were lucky to spot him through the trees 4 miles from where he became lost.
"We just happened to see him as he was crossing a clearing," Wright told Ten. "He's been dehydrated. Everything about him, all of his features, looked very sunken."
George Thomson, another rescue crew member, said Derry-Woodhead thanked them after being winched aboard the helicopter and asked for a popsicle.
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Not the sharpest knife in the drawer.
Never watched Bear Grylls or Ray Mears. I know there are a few American survivalists for you on the Discovery Channel. Ever watched them? If you had you would have know that three days in the Outback is indeed a big deal.
The smartest thing he could have done, though, is stay in one place out in the open and built a fire. And yes you can build a fire without matches, although carrying a flint and steel in wilderness areas is far more practical.
By the way TMITTELSTAED, one can get fire with wood-on-wood according to our American Indians.