Please Find My Son”: Father of Missing Chris Palmer Speaks Out for First Time in Outer Banks Disappearance
The plea came quietly but with raw urgency, shared through a family friend’s Facebook post that quickly spread across volunteer networks and local news feeds. “Please find my son,” Bren Palmer wrote in what marked his first public statement since his 39-year-old son, Christopher Lee Palmer, vanished into the vast, windswept expanse of North Carolina’s Outer Banks. The words, simple and direct, carried the weight of a father’s growing desperation as the search for Chris—last heard from on January 9—entered its third week with no resolution.
Bren Palmer, speaking from Arkansas where the family has been holding vigil, described a son who loved the outdoors, the kind of man who packed up his red 2017 Ford F-250 and his loyal German shepherd, Zoey, for extended camping trips through national parks. Chris had told his parents he was heading to Monongahela National Forest in West Virginia, even sending a short video of the rugged terrain to reassure them. “He was excited,” Bren recalled in messages relayed through volunteers. “He said it was going to be a good trip, just him and Zoey against the elements.” That was the last anyone in the family heard from him. No calls, no texts, no check-ins. Then came the bewildering news: his truck, stuck deep in the sand on a remote beach at Cape Hatteras National Seashore, was discovered by National Park Service rangers on January 12—hundreds of miles off course, in the opposite direction from where he said he was going.

The discovery shattered any assumption of a routine detour. The vehicle sat abandoned near Cape Point in Buxton, tires buried in what locals call deceptive “soft sand traps,” the cab empty except for personal items that offered no immediate clues. A blue-and-white kayak, clearly visible in Dare County traffic camera footage from January 9 as the truck rolled through the area, was missing from the bed. Cell phone pings placed Chris near the quiet village of Avon on the evening of January 10 and closer to Buxton the next day. Later finds—a kayak abandoned on the beach, footprints believed to match his boot size trailing into the dunes—had briefly ignited hope that he might still be sheltering somewhere on the barrier island. But as frigid winter weather closed in, those leads cooled, and the silence from Chris grew heavier.
Bren Palmer’s public appeal arrived amid this limbo. He reached out directly to volunteer groups like the United Cajun Navy, a network known for aiding in remote searches, asking them to join the effort. In his message, shared widely on January 22, he expressed bewilderment at the mismatch between his son’s planned route and the reality on Hatteras Island. “I don’t think he would go anywhere else other than where he said he was going,” Bren wrote, hinting at unspoken suspicions that something—or someone—might have altered Chris’s path. Yet he stopped short of speculation, focusing instead on the plea that now defines the case: bring his son home.
The Outer Banks, a narrow ribbon of sand and sea stretching along North Carolina’s coast, has always held an almost mythical pull for those seeking solitude. Its wild dunes, maritime forests thick with live oaks and yaupon, and the endless crash of the Atlantic can feel like the edge of the world. For a man like Chris—described by family as quiet, self-reliant, and deeply attached to his dog—it might have seemed an ideal place to disappear into nature. But the island is also unforgiving: tides that shift overnight, sudden squalls, temperatures that plummet after dark, and vast stretches where a person can walk for hours without seeing another soul. If Chris launched the kayak into Pamlico Sound or the ocean, or if he wandered inland seeking shelter, the terrain could easily have swallowed him and Zoey.
Search teams have not given up. National Park Service rangers, supported by local volunteers, K-9 units, and infrared drones, continue to sweep the areas around Buxton and Avon where the phone signals originated. Ground crews push through thick brush, calling for Chris and Zoey, while boaters patrol the sound side, eyes scanning marsh edges for any sign of movement. The tip line—888-653-0009—remains active, fielding calls from residents who report fleeting glimpses: a man with a dog along a backroad, a campfire glow in the dunes at night. So far, nothing definitive. Yet officials maintain cautious optimism that Chris, familiar with wilderness survival, could still be out there, perhaps hunkered in a hidden hollow or along an isolated inlet.
For Bren Palmer, each passing day without news carves deeper lines of worry. He has stayed in close contact with authorities, monitoring updates from afar while coordinating with volunteer responders. His statement marks a shift—from private anguish to public advocacy—urging anyone with even the smallest piece of information to come forward. “Our son Chris is missing,” he emphasized, the words echoing the helplessness many families feel in these cases. “Zoey is with him, we believe. Please, if you’ve seen anything, help us find them.”
The community in Buxton and Avon has responded in its understated way. Flyers with Chris’s photo—strawberry-blond hair, blue eyes, 5 feet 6 inches tall—remain taped to store windows and bulletin boards. Fishermen linger longer at dawn, scanning the horizon. Convenience store clerks ask customers if they’ve noticed anything unusual. “That dog wouldn’t leave his side,” one local said outside a gas station. “If Chris is alive, Zoey’s keeping him going.” The red truck, now impounded, stands as a silent sentinel, its presence a reminder of how abruptly a journey can end—or pause.
As winter grips the barrier islands tighter, the search presses on under gathering clouds. Bren Palmer’s plea hangs in the air like sea spray: “Please find my son.” In a place where the land itself moves with every tide, where secrets can hide for weeks before surfacing, the hope is that this story will end not in mystery, but in reunion. Until then, the dunes keep their silence, and a father waits.