A Florida man trying to re-create a hike to the summit of Mount-Washington he made with his daughter 40 years earlier was rescued Tuesday night on the Tuckerman Ravine Trail, according to authorities.

New Hampshire Fish and Game said Carl Bergeson, 77, of Ocala, Fla., was located by a team of rescuers about 9:30 p.m. Tuesday night, nearly two hours after his daughter, Krista Brousse, 51, of Kankee, Ill., called authorities requesting help for her exhausted father.

Officials said Brousse continued to the summit after her cellphone’s battery died, where she told rescuers her father’s approximate location, about a half mile below the summit on the Tuckerman Ravine Trail.

After an unsuccessful initial sweep of the area, rescuers eventually found Bergeson, who was said to be cold and tired but otherwise uninjured. Officials said winds at the summit were in excess of 20 mph at the time of the rescue, with temperatures at about 54 degrees.

Fish and Game said rescuers provided the pair with food, water and warm clothing, and returned them to the Pinkham Notch Visitor Center where they had started their hike early Tuesday.

Both hikers were said to have had gear recommended by the HikeSafe program, but did not possess a headlamp or flashlight, which officials said ultimately contributed to their call for help.