A specialist search team is set to help find as it approaches a month since the teenager was last seen in . that non-profit Signi Zoekhonden, based in the Netherlands, is sending over a group of five specialist volunteers and four dogs to the Canary Island, with a sixth person to join on Monday. Jay, from Oswaldtwistle in Lancashire has been missing on the Canary Island since June 17.
After the local efforts on Sunday, June 30, the family looked further afield for help finding Jay. The 19-year-old partied at a before leaving with two men and . He left the accommodation and after missing a bus told a friend that he was going to try and walk back to where he had been staying in the south - a trek that would take about 11 hours - before his battery went dead.
Nothing has been seen or heard of him since. On Sunday, July 14, Marieke Krans, one of the volunteers flying to the Canary Island, discussed from Brussels Airport. She told the corporation they will use drones in the search subject to flight permission from local authorities.
She told the : "We are very committed to come and we are confident in the dogs and in ourselves. Our dogs are trained to find people, both alive or dead, and have more skills. They can search underwater, and up mountains, whatever it may be.
" Ms Krans also told the BBC that the team will be in Tenerife for around five-and-a-half days while they search the island. The search team said they were due to speak with Jay Slater's family and the Spanish Guard.
