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Cousin says hiker who fell by waterfall near Vancouver lived and died selflessly

Charles Ryker Gamble is seen in this undated handout photo. Charles Ryker Gamble died after falling into a pool of a waterfall near Vancouver as he tried to save his best friend. They both died, as did a woman who was hiking with them.

 Charles Ryker Gamble is seen in this undated handout photo. Charles Ryker Gamble died after falling into a pool of a waterfall near Vancouver as he tried to save his best friend. They both died, as did a woman who was hiking with them. THE CANADIAN PRESS/HO, Rob MangelsdorfCharles Ryker Gamble is seen in this undated handout photo. Charles Ryker Gamble died after falling into a pool of a waterfall near Vancouver as he tried to save his best friend. They both died, as did a woman who was hiking with them. THE CANADIAN PRESS/HO, Rob Mangelsdorf

The cousin of a man who fell into a pool of a waterfall north of Vancouver says Charles Ryker Gamble lived an adventurous life travelling around the world but he'll be remembered most for attempting to help his best friend before he died.

Rob Mangelsdorf said Gamble, 30, who was known as Ryker, had thousands of people following him online as he vlogged about his global treks, but in the end he was with a buddy he'd known since childhood. Gamble worked on a video blog called High On Life that has almost 500,000 YouTube subscribers.

Mangelsdorf said Thursday that Gamble was hiking with friends around Shannon Falls on Tuesday when the accident happened that left three of them dead.

"My understanding is they just went for a hike, they weren't doing anything silly," Mangelsdorf said.

The bodies of the three victims were recovered Wednesday after RCMP officers rappelled to the pool via helicopter because the area is otherwise inaccessible.

Cpl. Sascha Banks of the Squamish RCMP detachment said family members have declined to release the names of the victims.

John Willcox of Squamish Search and Rescue has said witnesses reported seeing a woman slip and fall and that her boyfriend tried to save her before another man attempted to help his friend.

Mangelsdorf said a fourth friend of the trio saw what happened and called Gamble's mother with the tragic news.

"Even in his final act on this earth he was trying to save the life of his very best friend," he said.

"He'd known (his friend) his whole life, since they were little, little kids. They were inseparable, absolutely inseparable their whole lives."

Gamble had volunteered for years, including at a boxing facility in Vancouver where he coached youth, and overseas where he helped raise money for orphaned children, Mangelsdorf said.

"In his youth he was an amateur boxer and he was good and fought at provincial level," he said.

"His mother helped set up a school for orphan children in Uganda and he was very active in that, both fundraising and, I believe, he went over there as well to volunteer at some point."

Mangelsdorf said he last saw his cousin, who lived in Vancouver but grew up in nearby Richmond, about two months ago.

He said Gamble's older sister and the rest of his family are trying to cope with the death of a man who lived life to the fullest.

"He just had the ability to make a deep impact on people very quickly. He was very much loved by all those who knew him."

— Follow @CamilleBains1 on Twitter