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ACCIDENT REPORT FOR THE AMERICAN ALPINE CLUB
Fallen solo climber rescued on Mount Thielsen, Oregon, saved by chance encounter
Purpose and Description: The primary purpose of these reports and the Annual Report of Accidents in North American Mountaineering is to aid in the prevention of accidents.
FALL ON ROCK
Solo climber on Mt. Thielsen rescued by chance encounter after he was injured in fall from summit blocks
On Friday, June 25, 2010, Tristan Massie, (40), visiting Oregon from Maryland,
was free solo climbing the spectacular talus of the class four summit of Mount
Thielsen when he slipped, fell about 20 feet striking volcanic blocks and then
sliding about 50 feet on the steep snow field below the summit.
Tristan lay on the snow with a dislocated shoulder and shattered ankle, unable to move more than a few feet, for the the remainder of the day on Friday, when he heard a climber crossing the remote snowfield late in the afternoon. He was just barely able to attract the climber's attention.
Tristan had left his cell phone in his summit pack, stashed near his hiking boots at the foot of his proposed rock climb to the summit. The lone climber, Stewart Slay, had a cell phone and called 911 for Search and Rescue assistance at 5:07 pm. Tristan was lying directly on the snow, lightly clad and wearing climbing shoes, under the threat of frost bite and hypothermia. Time passed and it grew very cold and dark before the Douglas County Sheriff's Search and Rescue team could be mobilized and reach the snow covered slopes and the two climbers at 12:30 am. During the night, Tristan was lowered down the steep scree slope north west of the summit to easier ground, where, at about 10 am Saturday, he was hoisted up into an Oregon National Guard helicopter and flown to St. Charles Hospital in Bend, Oregon.
Analysis of Accident: What knowledge and
techniques will help prevent further accidents?
Experience tells us to climb new summits with known companions. From Maryland,
Tristan had scheduled a guided climb of some Cascades peaks near Bend, but
remaining snow fields had put the peaks out of reasonable reach for the guided group.
Mount Thielsen was suggested as a lower easy peak. A strong long-distance runner, (his wife, Tammy, competes in 100 mile ultra-runs), he reached the summit blocks in just four hours from the trail head
despite drifts of snow on the trail and the large soft steep snow field below the
summit. Local experience tells us that few people climb Mount Thielsen this early in the summer.
Tammy Massie notes that Tristan did not carry his cell phone in a warm pants pocket, or their SPOT-2 "GPS satellite communicator" and that he did not have a topo map of Mount Thielsen. He did not have a helmet, usually required when bagging peaks in the Oregon Cascades. He did not have Essentials for an emergency. Rather than carrying his small summit pack on the scramble, he had left it at the base of the rock face with his boots. He was unable to reach his summit pack, boots and cell phone or his larger pack which, however, did not have gear for a stranding overnight in the forecast conditions. He might not have survived the night, lying lightly dressed in tight climbing shoes directly on the snow in subzero temperatures and summit winds, without his chance encounter with Stewart Slay.
We have confirmed that Tristan had not set a specific time for a designated Responsible Person to call 911, if he did not check in or answer his cell phone. Tammie Massie states: "Unfortunately in the case of Tristan's adventure in Oregon, I would only have called 911 on Sunday night when he did not get back on his flight."
From photos in his digital camera, we noted that Tristan was off the traditional route, climbing the north side rather than the easier south-west side of the summit talus blocks.
(Source: Robert Speik, following interviews with
the Massies at St. Charles Hospital and Wayne A. Stinson of the Douglas County, Oregon,
Sheriff's Search and Rescue Volunteer Unit
Report filed by Robert Speik for the 63rd annual edition of ANAM to be published in 2011
Copyright© 2010 by Robert Speik. All Rights Reserved.
What can be learned from this event?
The primary purpose of our TraditionalMountaineering experience reports (and the purpose of the American Alpine Club's sixty-two published Annual Reports of Accidents in North American Mountaineering) is to "aid in the prevention of accidents".
Experience tells us to climb new summits with
known companions. Take care to do research for the best route to the summit (for
Thielsen, usually done in trail shoes, not rock shoes, on the south-side shortest-pitch to the
summit). Be sure to agree with a
designated Responsible Person, that they will call 911 at an agreed
time, if you have not checked in. Keep an ordinary digital cell
phone in your pants pocket. Most mountaineering accidents in the United States
over the past few years, have been resolved by cell phone. Consider carrying a
new SPOT-2 "Satellite GPS Messenger". A local summit may not be worth
the loss of life or limb.
--Robert Speik
A QUOTE FROM EDWARD WYMPER IN 1871
See yonder height! 'Tis far away -- unbidden comes the word "Impossible!"
"Not so," says the mountaineer. "The way is long, I know; its difficult --
it may be dangerous."
"It's possible, I'm sure; I'll seek the way, take counsel of my brother mountaineers,
and find out how they have reached similar heights and learned to avoid the dangers."
He starts (all slumbering down below); the path is slippery and may be
dangerous too.
Caution and perseverance gain the day
-- the height is reached! and those
beneath cry, "Incredible! 'Tis superhuman!"
This is a passage we found on page 161 of "Scrambles
Amongst the Alps" by Edward Wymper,
first published in 1871 and reprinted 1981 by Ten Speed Press, Berkley, CA.
What do the Rescuers say?
Rescuers: Man rescued from Mt. Thielsen was lucky
The NEWS-REVIEW
By Kathy Korengel
Tuesday, June 29, 2010
Tristan Massie was lucky, say the search and rescue volunteers who rescued
him from the top of Mount Thielsen Friday.
The skies were clear and it was relatively warm, said John Punches, the leader
of the Douglas County Search and Rescue team that went to the aid of Massie, 40,
of Maryland.
And another hiker, Stewart Slay, happened to be on the mountain the same day,
said Wayne Stinson, the sheriff's office emergency manager.
Slay “barely heard” the call for help after Massie fell and badly sprained his
ankle and dislocated his shoulder about 400 feet from the top of the 9,128-foot
peak.
As of Monday afternoon, Massie was still at St. Charles Medical Center in Bend,
Stinson said. Doctors had restored his shoulder and operated on his ankle.
Stinson said Slay called the 911 dispatch center at 5:07 pm Friday, after
hearing Massie's calls for help. Members of the Search and Rescue team arrived
at the trailhead about 8:15 p.m., Punches said. He and another team member, Cory
Sipher, reached Massie by about 12:30 am.
They put him in a seat harness, such as one worn by rock climbers. With ropes
attached to the harness, they worked together to belay Massie down the steep
slope.
Partly to get him moving and to prevent hypothermia from setting in, they asked
Massie to help by sliding over the loose rock and snow on his backside and using
his good leg and good arm to guide himself.
Two hours later, they met up with two paramedics from Douglas County Fire
District No. 2 and more Search and Rescue members who had carried up a rescue
litter, similar to a stretcher.
Because of concern about Massie's ankle, they decided to ask a helicopter from
an Oregon National Guard aviation unit from Salem to help take the Maryland man
off the mountain, Stinson said.
The rescue team then continued down the mountain with Massie, reaching the
Pacific Crest Trail at about 7,400 feet elevation at about 7:30 or 8 a.m. the
next morning, Punches said.
The helicopter arrived at 10:15 a.m. Because there was no place big enough to
land, the helicopter crew used a winch to raise Massie's litter to the
helicopter. They headed off to St. Charles hospital at 10:47 a.m.
All told, 18 Search and Rescue members, two sheriff's deputies and the two
paramedics responded, Stinson said. Members from most divisions of Search and
Rescue, including from the mountain rescue and 4x4 divisions, responded. All are
volunteers.
Volunteers with the Explorer program for 14- to 18-year-olds also helped,
Punches said.
Punches, who has been on the Douglas County Search and Rescue team since 1995
and is an Oregon State University Extension Service forestry agent in the
Douglas County office, said rescues on Mount Thielsen are amazingly rare.
He remembers one fatality when a woman camped at the summit as it was getting
dark, but then fell. Another time, a man fell and injured himself and had to be
flown out immediately.
Punches recalled two times he's helped people off the mountain by giving them
directions over their cell phones. Both were summer rescues, when hikers
unexpectedly ran into winter weather and whiteout conditions.
Punches advises hikers to be prepared for such unexpected conditions. Bring
extra food, water, clothing, a map and a compass, he said. Bring a fully charged
cell phone, although don't expect to be able to use it everywhere on the
mountain.
Both Punches and Stinson suggest hikers climb the peak with others. Before you
take off, tell someone where you're going and about when you expect to be back,
Punches said.
When hikers are significantly late in returning, those left behind may call 911
for help. “Be reasonable,” he added.
“If hikers were expected back at 5 in the afternoon, and now it's midnight, that
should be ringing some bells,” he said.
http://www.nrtoday.com/article/20100629/NEWS/100629777/1063/NEWS&ParentProfile=1055
The rest of the story-
Hi Tammy-
Thanks for your email (earlier today). I was concerned that I had offended you
(by my Report).
I think that Tristan is not a risk taker or a careless person. He is just
un-informed of the traditional mitigations of the inherent risks of outdoor
activities in the mountains.
Mitigating these inherent risks are the subject of traditional instruction given
by major outdoor clubs in developed countries around the world (and in Maryland
too, I'm sure).
Tommy, my wife of more than 60 years, never sought the summits but so enjoyed
the Basic to Advanced instruction (30 evening hours and several week end
training trips) that she participated fully (even though I was Chair for three
years, for the Sierra Club's Mountaineering Training Committee, training 1,000
folks off the streets in Southern California, and often away on trips, bagging more than
300 peaks).
The premise of "He who knows naught, knows not
that he knows naught" applies to you folks. It is fun to use the SPOT-2
to communicate - "Hi honey, I am OK and I am right here" -, etc. It is
important to know that you should carry your summit pack to the summit, etc.
It is enabling to know how to print and follow a 1:24,000 USGS Quad topo map,
and find your exact location in UTM Coordinates (NAD27 Datum).
The standard textbook is "Mountaineering, The Freedom of the Hills", 7th edition.
Other books mentioned on my web, (listed under Books ;-), can take your
traditional knowledge to
higher levels.
Guided trips often only train you to be a good follower, I think.
Read my Mission Statement and study my pertinent web pages!
Well, best of luck to both of you! Finish smart and finish first and climb
smart and safe as possible.
--Bob Speik, and Tommy Speik too
PS:
http://traditionalmountaineering.org/Report_MountThielsen_SoloFall.htm
"TraditionalMountaineering is founded on the premise that "He who knows naught,
knows not that he knows naught", that exploring the hills and summiting peaks
have dangers that are hidden to the un-informed and that these inherent risks
can be in part identified and mitigated by information, training, interesting
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 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 mountaineering."
Good Evening (Bob),
I was not offended. I just am saddened that Tristan had to learn the lesson of
safety "hands on" rather than by reading a book, article or detailed accident
report about someone else.
I tend to be very risk adverse although one could say my 100 miler running has
potential risks...but I mitigate them as best I can and all my training is in a
safe environment and the actual races do keep runners relatively safe by having
check points and weighing us, checking our mental status and ensuring we are
eating/drinking and acting healthy.
Take care,
--Tammy
Climbing Mount Thielsen
Mount Thielsen is an accessible hike for many
By Mark Morical / The Bulletin
Published: August 29. 2010
I glanced up at the exposed rock spire that rose 80 feet straight up into the
blue sky.
The decision was easy.
“Yeah,” I said. “Give me the rope.”
David Potter, of Central Oregon’s Smith Rock Climbing Guides, tied a rope around
my waist, and Brett Yost took the rope and climbed up ahead of me to secure it
above.
I began to climb the final pitch to the summit of 9,182-foot Mount Thielsen.
We had started just a couple hours earlier, from the Mount Thielsen Trailhead
across state Highway 138 from Diamond Lake.
I had heard that Mount Thielsen was not as aerobically challenging as South
Sister, which I had climbed twice before, but that some technical rock climbing
was required to reach the summit.
Six of us started out from the trailhead last week on a brisk, sunny morning.
Except for myself, all were experienced rock climbers, for which I would be
grateful later on.
The hike — 9.8 miles round trip with an elevation gain of 3,782 feet — started
out fairly flat through a dense lodgepole pine forest that would have been
thicker still if not for an apparent storm that had recently blown through,
upending many trees by their roots.
Eventually the trail, as it rises above the tree line, comes to a long ridgeline
offering dramatic views. To the north, we could see the rugged green hills of
the Umpqua National Forest, with the Three Sisters far in the distance.
To the south, the steep, rugged south rim of Crater Lake shot into the sky.
Mount Bailey towered over Diamond Lake to the west.
Along the ridge, Thielsen came into view, and it looked even more impossible to
climb than it did from the highway. How does one negotiate such a narrow tip of
rock?
The west slope of Thielsen, typically covered in winter and springtime by snow,
was nothing but a massive deposit of gray and red scree.
According to www.ski- mountaineer.com, a few hundred thousand years ago,
Thielsen was a broad shield volcano similar to Mount Bailey. But heavy
glaciation — including three ice ages without an eruption — has eroded Thielsen
down to its spire summit. Also left behind are several unique formations of
solidified magma, some resembling ancient European castles.
After four miles, the Mount Thielsen trail connects with the Pacific Crest
National Scenic Trail. From there, the trail changes from dirt to pumice,
becoming steeper and steeper. Soon the pumice gives way to small to large pieces
of shale — which made for slow going for our group of climbers.
As the shale pieces became larger, the trail became fainter. We chose our route
carefully, checking rocks to make sure they were not loose, which could send us
tumbling down the slope.
I began using my hands more and more as the route became even more precipitous.
Finally, we came to a comfortable resting spot below the 80-foot technical climb
to the summit on the south face. We stopped for a while and enjoyed the views.
The north side of Thielsen drops straight down, about 1,000 feet to the tiny
Lathrop Glacier, Oregon’s southernmost glacier.
I was relieved that we had brought the rope.
Others made their way up to the summit before me with no problems. This was
hardly rock climbing to them. The last 80 feet is considered Class 4 climbing,
which means some might need a rope and others might not, according to Yost.
With me tied to the rope, Yost climbed up ahead and secured a “hip belay,”
passing the rope around his waist and wedging himself between two solid rocks.
This way, if I fell during the climb, he and the rocks would support my weight
and I would fall back with nothing more than some rib pain from the rope around
my waist riding up.
I could feel the rope support me as I climbed, much like a rock-climbing
harness. The first part was not so bad. I found plenty of hand- and footholds,
checking to make sure the rocks were not loose before grabbing on. I came into a
crack in the rock, nearly got stuck, but worked my way out.
Suddenly, I reached a spot where I had to move to my left — but a huge boulder
was in my face, and only a tiny spot on which to stand was available to the
left. Below was a drop of 2,000 feet.
This was the crux of the 80-foot pitch.
For about 30 seconds I was paralyzed with fear, before I put my trust in the
rope and Yost.
I placed my foot on the ledge, then found some handholds on the other side of
the boulder, and I pulled my way up.
The rest was fairly easy, but I had to ask if I was actually at the top.
“Yes!”
High-fives ensued.
The view from the summit was unsurpassed, but perhaps even more intriguing was
the evidence of lightning strikes. According to www.wilderness.net, Thielsen is
believed to be struck by lightning more than any other Cascade peak. Fulgurite —
small, glassy burns caused by lightning — can be seen on rocks at the summit.
We needed just about three hours to reach the top, and we remained on the
cramped summit for about 15 minutes — just the six of us occupied most of the
space up there.
Coming down the summit pitch (tied to the rope once again) was easier, and I
felt more confident.
But the hike down is always the hardest, and it put my knees to the test.
We negotiated our way down carefully. Eventually, we could “punch scree,”
letting our shoes dip into the loose ground as we descended the steep slopes.
We were back at the trailhead by 2 p.m., making it a 5½-hour round trip. By
contrast, I had needed eight hours to make it up and down South Sister.
Everyone seemed to love Thielsen, a climb that is relatively accessible to
reasonably fit outdoor enthusiasts but is not swarmed by hundreds of climbers.
For those with limited rock-climbing experience, I strongly recommend going with
experienced climbers who can secure others safely to a rope.
Otherwise, you might find yourself looking up at that craggy spire, just 80 feet
from the summit, wishing you had that rope.
http://www.bendbulletin.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20100829/NEWS01/8290376
WARNING - *DISCLAIMER!*
Mountain climbing has inherent dangers that can in part, be mitigated
Read more . . .
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