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In summer, snow still the enemy - two rescued in separate mountain incidents
In summer, snow still the enemy Two rescued in separate
mountain incidents
The Bulletin
By Scott Hammers
July 8, 2011
Even in July, last winter's record snowfall presents a threat to hikers
venturing into the forest unprepared.
Tuesday, a 17-year-old Bend boy fell into a 20-foot-deep crevasse shortly after
reaching the summit of South Sister. The boy was able to climb out of the
crevasse with minor injuries, but Deschutes County Search and Rescue was called in
to help him and his climbing party get off the mountain.
Wednesday, a Sisters woman was found distraught on State Highway 242, having
just come off the Pacific Crest Trail.
According to Forest Service law enforcement officers, the woman and her dog had
been dropped off where the trail crosses Santiam Pass five days earlier, with
arrangements to meet her father at Elk Lake on Wednesday. Instead, she
encountered heavy snow and made it only a fraction of the way.
Having made it about two days south of State Highway 242, the woman ran out of
water and panicked. She abandoned her tent and other equipment and headed back
north to the highway, leaving behind a note reading “going to 242, please save
us.”
Chris Sabo, trails specialist for the Deschutes National Forest, said while the
Pacific Crest Trail hiker was reunited with her family, her trip — as well as
the Bend teen's trip up South Sister — could have ended disastrously.
The woman suffered scratches from sinking knee-deep into the snow, but this
“postholing” easily could have resulted in a broken leg or other serious leg
injury, Sabo said. Although she was carrying a cellphone, she did not have
service, Sabo said, and did not encounter any other hikers in her six days on
the trail.
“People (are) going to go out no matter what we tell them, and things like this
will happen,” he said. “Search and Rescue is probably going to see a higher blip
of missions out there until this melts off.”
Late-season snow doesn't seem to be deterring locals and tourists from heading
into the forest, said Lt. Scott Shelton of Search & Rescue. Although nobody has
been seriously injured, Shelton said many have found themselves ill-prepared.
“People are moving out to higher country and to the more remote areas not
realizing we still have a lot of snow and the trails are not in the best
condition,” Shelton said.
"Melt-off is running about three to four weeks behind normal around South Sister",
Sabo said, "and a bit further behind on the western slopes of the Cascades".
Sabo said he went up to South Sister on July 1 for some backcountry skiing and
found conditions difficult. "Melting snow is opening up 'crevasses', and the 'snow
cupping' is abundant. The large melted pits make the snow surface resemble a
giant golf ball and complicate travel across the uneven footing".
At Moraine Lake, about two miles up the trail from the Cascade Lakes Highway,
Sabo observed snow six to eight feet deep and most of the lake frozen over.
"Trails in the area are not well marked", he said, "and can be difficult to locate
when snow obscures the path".
“I think we're going to get a lot more people that haven't hiked in these summer
snow conditions, and whether it's falling into a 'crevasse', a creek, even a lake,
some of them are going to get in trouble,” Sabo said.
Shelton said summerlike weather at lower altitudes does not guarantee mild
conditions as hikers head into the mountains.
“You've got to be properly equipped. You don't hike on a glacier in tennis
shoes. It's common sense.”
Early season hiking, horseback riding and mountain biking can damage trails.
The trail network linking South Sister, Green Lakes and the Green Lakes
Trailhead near Devils Lake is the most-used high-altitude trail system in the
state, Sabo said, and heavy traffic there makes it vulnerable to damage while
snow is melting off.
Hikers who steer around puddles or un-melted snow are likely to trample plant
life on either side, inadvertently widening the trail. Additionally, the long
snow season has prevented crews from removing blown-down trees on most High
Cascades trails, in some cases rendering them impassible for hikers or horseback
riders without stepping off into the sensitive vegetation.
http://www.bendbulletin.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20110708/NEWS01/107080387
What can be learned from these informative incidents?
We have been unable to talk to either of the two backcountry
travelers whose narrow escapes are described above.
Federal HIPPA privacy laws prevent medical personnel, including SAR Units, from providing contact
information for patients. If the travelers will contact us, we will correct any
inaccuracies in our analysis. This is not a 'could-a, would-a, should-a
exercise, but a traditional effort to help folks learn valuable lessons from the
experiences of others.
The SAR Press Release for the crevasse incident stated in part:
". . .one of the climbers, a 17-year-old boy,
wandered off-trail near the Lewis Glacier and fell 20 feet into a crevasse -- a deep crack in ice", said
sheriff's Deputy Rhett Hemphill.
In fact, one must intentionally clamber many
meters off the obvious dirt trail on the lateral moraine and intentionally climb out onto what can appear to be an inviting
snow field, to "glissade" down the snow. The word "wandering" does not report the true picture of this
incident.
The normal scramble trail to the volcanic caldera rim is along the west lateral
moraine of rock and pumice pushed up by the slowly sliding ice. It actually melts clear
of snow very early in the season and can be seen from Bend. See the photos
and description of the glacier in my previous post:
http://www.traditionalmountaineering.org/News_SouthSister_Crevasse.htm
This page describes the exhausting climb to the summit of South Sister: http://traditionalmountaineering.org/Photos_SoSister.htm
As for any lessons out of this: "Stay on the trails," Hemphill said. "Make sure you know proper climbing techniques. When you are up there doing the glacier crossings, just make sure you practice the right safety stuff."
Robert Speik comments: "Perhaps the best lesson is to carry a small day pack with extra clothing insulation, snacks and water and a map, compass and GPS. Carry an ordinary cell phone to call 911 and talk with SAR about your 'dislocated knee' ". SAR is organized to serve the public and you will not be charged for the call. Yes, they can most probably locate you through your ordinary phone, taking the search out of search and rescue."
The SAR Press
Release for the exhausted PCT section hiker stated in part:
"Wednesday, a Sisters woman was found distraught on State Highway 242,
having just come off the Pacific Crest Trail."
According to Forest Service law enforcement officers, the woman and her dog had
been dropped off where the trail crosses Santiam Pass five days earlier, with
arrangements to meet her father at Elk Lake on Wednesday. Instead, she
encountered heavy snow and made it only a fraction of the way.
Having made it about two days south of State Highway 242, the woman ran out of
water and panicked. She abandoned her tent and other equipment and headed back
north to the highway, leaving behind a note reading 'going to 242, please save
us.”
Robert Speik comments: Note that many who panic and abandon their packs, die from hypothermia in their run for the trail head. (Never abandon your shelter, insulation, food and water.)
“I think we're going to get a lot more people that haven't hiked in these
summer snow conditions, and whether it's falling into a crevasse, a creek, even
a lake, some of them are going to get in trouble,” Sabo said.
Since a crevasse is by definition only possible in an ancient glacier, falling
into one is very unlikely.
"Although she was carrying a cellphone, she did not have service", Sabo said. Unfortunately, Sabo does not say if her provider was Verizon, which is dedicated to rural coverage as well as fancy apps.
Note that the "crevasse" Rescue was initiated by a cell phone call to 911 from
near the summit of South Sister. Multiple cell phone providers have leased
space, legally permitted and also supplied with electricity, on the top of Mt. Bachelor.
The summit of South Sister is a very short straight line distance from the
summit of Mt. Bachelor. The other rescue was initiated after a two day retreat,
post-holing in deep soft snow during one of the warmest periods of this spring.
By luck the woman found some one to help her along the road. Cell phones have increasing coverage, year by year. Check
connectivity your favorite recreation areas.
Much of the high desert area and the Three Sisters Wilderness is covered by
Verizon CDMA cell phone towers.
Note that Verizon towers can not be "seen" by any other local Providers
who do not use CDMA code. However, hunters, climbers and others who adventure into the backcountry,
can carry a
$149.00 SPOT-2 GPS Satellite Messenger. This new device will send a message
home, "I'm OK and having fun exactly here on this map"; or message friends "I could use a
little help, exactly here"; or send a message to 911 "I need help exactly here,
right now - see the map attached," (taking the Search out of Search and Rescue)! Lastly, the traditional answer to postholing in spring snow
is: TECHNICAL SNOWSHOES. Read more here:
http://www.traditionalmountaineering.org/FAQ_Snowshoes.htm Here are some Basic suggestions for all backcountry
travelers 1. Practice the Four Basic Responsibilities of
the Backcountry Traveler. They work! Basic
Responsibilities 2. Carry items in the new Ten Essential Systems, sized
for the forecast weather and the adventure in a light day pack. This includes a map,
compass and GPS and the skills to use them. In the spring winter, this includes enough
extra insulation and waterproof clothing to keep you dry and warm if you become
stranded. In snow, you must have a shovel and insulating pad and the skills to
make a shelter in the snow to avoid hypothermia and frost bite damage. It works!
Essential Systems 3. Carry a fully charged digital cell phone
and periodically check where it can communicate with any cell towers to assist
authorities to triangulate your position from cell tower pings. (Most cell providers do not
use cell phone GPS signals to locate customers under FCC E911 regulations - they use triangulation). Cold
disables batteries. If the weather is cold, carry the cell phone in a pants
pocket near the femoral artery. Report your UTM NAD27 coordinates, your
condition, the conditions where you are and discuss your plans with SAR.
Ordinary Cell Phones If you may be out of cell
tower range, carry a SPOT. SPOT-2 Satellite
Messenger 4. Always stay found on your topo map and be aware of major land features. If visibility starts to wane,
reconfirm your bearings with your map, compass and GPS and quickly return to a
known location. A
GPS is the only practical way for a trained individual to navigate in a whiteout
or blowing snow. Lost Mt Hood Climbers
Copyright 2011 by Robert Speik. All Rights Reserved.
A suggested minimum standard news advisory for all backcountry travelers!
"We would like to take this opportunity to ask our visitors to the backcountry of Oregon to Plan for the unexpected. Each person should dress for the forecast weather and take minimum extra clothing to provide protection from a drop in temperature and possible rain or snow storm or an unexpected cold wet night out. Each person should carry high carbohydrate snacks, two quarts of water or Gatorade, a topo map and declination adjusted base plate compass and an optional inexpensive GPS (and the skills to use them together). Each person who has a cell phone should carry their ordinary charged cell phone (from a service provider that has the best local backcountry coverage) and possibly, a SPOT-2 GPS Satellite Communicator. Each person should carry their selected items from the new 'Ten Essentials Systems' in a day pack sized for the individual, the trip, the season and the forecast weather."
"Visitors are reminded to tell a Responsible Person where they are going, where they plan to park, when they will be back and to make sure that person understands that they are relied upon to call 911 at a certain time if the backcountry traveler has not returned. Call 911 as soon as you become lost or stranded. You will not be charged. Do not try to find your way until you are benighted, exhausted, or worse yet - wet. Your ordinary cell phone call can take the 'Search' out of Search and Rescue."
THE MISSION of TraditionalMountaineering.org
"To provide information and instruction about world-wide basic to advanced alpine mountain climbing safety skills and gear, on and off trail hiking, scrambling and light and fast Leave No Trace backpacking techniques based on the foundation of an appreciation for the Stewardship of the Land, all illustrated through photographs and accounts of actual shared mountaineering adventures."
TraditionalMountaineering is founded on the premise that "He who knows naught, knows not that he knows naught", that exploring the hills and summitting peaks have dangers that are hidden to the un-informed and that these inherent risks can be in part, identified and mitigated by mentoring: information, training, wonderful gear, and knowledge gained through the experiences of others.
The value of TraditionalMountaineering to our Friends and Subscribers is the selectivity of the information we provide, and its relevance to introducing folks to informed hiking on the trail, exploring off the trail, mountain travel and Leave-no-Trace light-weight bivy and backpacking, technical travel over steep snow, rock and ice, technical glacier travel and a little technical rock climbing on the way to the summit. Whatever your capabilities and interests, there is a place for everyone in traditional alpine mountaineering.
WARNING - *DISCLAIMER!*
Mountain climbing has inherent dangers that can, only in part, be mitigated
Read more . . .
Two rescued in Three Sisters Wilderness
Bend Teen Falls Into Crevasse on South Sister
Three Stranded Hikers Assisted from Atop South Sister by SAR
Father and sons rescued descending South Sister in storm on Labor Day
Man rescued from crevasse just off South Sister climber's trail
Prospectus for a summer climb of South Sister
Hiking to the summit of South Sister
Family of five and exhausted Great Dane dog rescued from South Sister Climber's Trail
Photos of a South Sister snow-climb in June 2006
A cross country circumnavigation of South Sister in September
South sister spring overnight snow climb for gear and skills
Hikers rescued after long night in woods
Mountain Rescue Association's Position on Rescue Charges
Oregon Badlands camper lost overnight, found by SAR
Lost La Pine ATVer rescued in fortunate encounter near Twin Lakes Resort
How can I prevent, recognize and treat Hypothermia?
Op-Ed: Prepare for the worst before setting out in the winter
Lost Prineville hunter avoids hypothermia! What did he do right?
Mount Hood - Analysis of the December 2009 deaths by hypothermia, of three climbers on Reid Glacier Headwall
Climber on Mt. Rainier dies of hypothermia in brief storm. What happened
South Sister, solo hiker found unconscious near the summit
Three stranded hikers assisted from atop South Sister by SAR
Several lost hiker incidents near Sisters, resolved by SAR
Fallen solo climber on Mount Thielsen, rescued by chance encounter
Climbing South Sister: A Prospectus and a Labor Day near disaster
Man rescued from crevasse just off South Sister climber's trail
Photos of a climb of South Sister
What do you carry in your summer day pack?
Several lost hiker incidents near Sisters, Oregon, resolved by SAR
Snowshoer, "lost" near Wanoga snowpark, rescued by SAR
"Be Prepared" to be stranded on winter forest roads in Oregon
Several drivers become stranded on Oregon winter forest roads, led their new GPS' "fastest way" setting
Gear grist, an article written for The Mountaineer, the monthly newsletter of The Mountaineers
Robert Speik writes: "Use your digital cell in the backcountry" for The Mountaineer
Snowboarder lost overnight near Mount Bachelor, rescued by SAR
Woman leaves car stuck in snow near Klamath Falls, dies from exposure
Climbing South Sister: A Prospectus and a Labor Day near disaster
Trail runner survives fall on ice with cell phone call
Once again, hypothermia kills stranded Oregon driver
Lessons learned from the latest lost Mt. Hood climbers
Lessons learned from the latest lost Christmas tree hunters
FREE Clinic on Real Survival Strategies and Staying Found with Map, Compass and GPS together
What do you carry in your winter day and summit pack?
Why are "Snow Caves" dangerous?
Why are "Space Blankets" dangerous?
Why are "Emergency Kits" dangerous?
How can you avoid Hypothermia?
Missing climbers on Mount Hood, one dies of exposure, two believed killed in fall
Missing California family found, dad dies from exposure and hypothermia
Missing man survives two weeks trapped in snow-covered car
Missing snowmobile riders found, Roger Rouse dies from hypothermia
Olympic Champion Rulon Gardner lost on snowmobile!
Lost Olympic hockey player looses feet to cold injury
Expert skier lost five days near resort in North Cascades without map, compass, gps or cell phone
Mount Hood - The Episcopal School Tragedy
Mount Hood - experienced climbers rescued from snow cave
How can you learn the skills of snow camping?
Prospectus
Lost and Found
How can I prevent, recognize and treat Hypothermia?
Op-Ed: Prepare for the worst before setting out in the winter
Prineville hunter lost 4 winter days and 3 nights in the Ochoco National Forest
Several hikers lost near Sisters, rescued by SAR
Snowshoer, "lost" near Wanoga snowpark, rescued by SAR
"Be Prepared" to be stranded on winter forest roads in Oregon
Several drivers become stranded on Oregon winter forest roads, led their new GPS' "fastest way" setting
Gear grist, an article written for The Mountaineer, the monthly newsletter of The Mountaineers
Robert Speik writes: "Use your digital cell in the backcountry" for The Mountaineer
Teen girls become lost overnight returning from hike to Moraine Lake
Snowboarder lost overnight near Mount Bachelor, rescued by SAR
Woman leaves car stuck in snow near Klamath Falls, dies from exposure
Man rescued from crevasse just off South Sister climber's trail
Climbing South Sister: A Prospectus and a Labor Day near disaster
Trail runner survives fall on ice with cell phone call
Once again, hypothermia kills stranded Oregon driver
Lessons learned from the latest lost Mt. Hood climbers
Lessons learned from the latest lost Christmas tree hunters
New rescue services for all American Alpine Club Members
OpEd: Oregon requires electronic communications in the backcountry
Rescue charges in traditional alpine mountaineering
Governor establishes a Search and Rescue Task Force
Oregon Search and Rescue Statutes
Lost hiker in Oregon backcountry found with heat-sensing device in airplane
HB2509 mandates electronic locator beacons on Mt. Hood - climbers' views
Oregon HB 2509
Three hikers and a dog rescued on Mt. Hood
Motorist stuck in snow on backcountry Road 18, phones 911 for rescue
Snow stranded Utah couple leave car and die from hypothermia
Death on Mt. Hood - What happened to the three North Face climbers?
Two climbers become lost descending Mt. Hood
Missing California family found, dad dies from exposure and hypothermia
Missing man survives two weeks trapped in snow-covered car
Missing snowmobile riders found, Roger Rouse dies from hypothermia
Lost snowmobile riders found, one deceased from hypothermia
Lost climber hikes 6.5 miles from South Sister Trail to Elk Lake
Hiking couple lost three nights in San Jacinto Wilderness find abandoned gear
Expert skier lost five days in North Cascades without Essentials, map and compass
Climber disappears on the steep snow slopes of Mount McLaughlin
Hiker lost five days in freezing weather on Mount Hood
Professor and son elude search and rescue volunteers
Found person becomes lost and eludes rescuers for five days
Teens, lost on South Sister, use cell phone with Search and Rescue
Lost man walks 27 miles to the highway from Elk Lake Oregon
Snowboarder Found After Week in Wilderness
Searchers rescue hiker at Smith Rock, find lost climbers on North Sister
Girl found in Lane County after becoming lost on hiking trip
Search and rescue finds young girls lost from family group
Portland athlete lost on Mt. Hood
Rescues after the recent snows
Novice couple lost in the woods
Search called off for missing climber Corwin Osborn
Broken Top remains confirmed as missing climber
Ollalie Trail - OSU Trip - Lost, No Map, Inadequate Clothing
Your Essential Light Day Pack
What are the new Ten Essential Systems?
What does experience tell us about Light and Fast climbing?
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What is Light and Fast alpine climbing?
What do you carry in your day pack?
Photos?
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Photos?
What should I know about "space blankets"?
Where can I get a personal and a group first aid kit?
Photos?
Carboration and Hydration
Is running the Western States 100 part of "traditional mountaineering"?
What's wrong with GORP?
Answers to the quiz!
Why do I need to count carbohydrate calories?
What should I know about having a big freeze-dried dinner?
What about carbo-ration and fluid replacement during traditional alpine climbing?
4 pages in pdf
What should I eat before a day of alpine climbing?
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Cuatro Responsabiliades Basicas de Quienes Salen al Campo
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Los Diez Sistemas Esenciales
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This pdf form will need to be signed by you at the trail head
Sample Prospectus
Make sure every leader tells you what the group is going to do; print a copy for your "responsible person"
Participant Information Form
This pdf form can be printed and mailed or handed to the Leader if requested or required
Emergency and Incident Report Form
Copy and print this form. Carry two copies with your Essentials
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Print this form. Make up your own first aid essentials (kits)
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