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ACCIDENT REPORT FOR THE AMERICAN ALPINE CLUB
North Sister accident analyzed by
Fitz Cahall
The primary purpose of these experience reports and the Annual Report of Accidents in North American Mountaineering is to aid in the prevention of accidents.
Narrative Description of Accident:
On May 15, 2007, I (Fitz Cahall, 29), set out alone to climb and snowboard North and Middle
Sister in the Sisters Wilderness in Central Oregon. I knew I would likely
encounter technical terrain on North Sister’s summit ridge and tower. After
skinning up to the notch between the two peaks, I climbed North Sister’s
Southwest Ridge before leaving the snowboard at the top of the south face.
From there I traversed across steep slopes to the summit pinnacle.
I made two bad decisions that when combined together equaled a stupid mistake.
First, at the base of the summit pinnacle – a rotting volcanic rock that
requires technical climbing – I left my summit pack behind. I chose to keep it
simple and take nothing. Despite hiking all this gear – ice axe, crampons -- for
miles, up thousands of feet, I left it for the last 100 feet. Instead of
climbing the standard route, which was draped in a thick layer of rotting ice, I
chose to climb a hundred foot section of bad rock.
Second, 30 feet up, I climbed through a section of frighteningly loose rock. I
should have immediately gone back for the bag and investigated another way up or
bailed, but I didn’t. I just kept climbing and figured I would address a descent
option later. Again, I realized that this was a bad decision and made it anyway.
These decisions were made out of haste.
With the days first summit almost in the
bag, I was already thinking about the descent and the next climb. If I had been
climbing with a partner, there is no way I would have made the same choices.
Simply put, I would have never let a friend make the series of mistakes, yet
somehow I allowed myself to make those mistakes.
With no rope, crampons, or ice axe, my options for descent were limited. I
could either down climb through the band of loose rock or look for a less
exposed option. I down climbed just to the left of the standard route, but still
had to traverse back to my backpack across a small gulley above cliffs and rock
bands. Realizing my mistake, I used two sharp rocks as make-shift ice tools and
tried to hack small steps in the hard ice for my feet. I made a few moves across
the gulley, but almost instantly lost my footing and slipped. I was almost able
to stop my fall with the make-shift rock axes, but lost control.
I went over a 10 to 15 foot cliff into the central gulley known as the bowling
alley. Gathering speed, I managed to get pointed feet first. I kept my feet
slightly off the ground to avoid catching them on the snow and ice. Although I
was out of control, at least I was sliding feet first as opposed to tumbling
head over heals. I tried grabbing at the rock walls of the gulley and digging my
fingernails into the ice. Using my elbows to steer me to the edge of the gulley,
I tore at the wall trying to slow down. Nothing seemed to work. I must have hit
a patch of sun-softened snow that slowed me just enough so that I could
successfully grab onto something. I have no idea how I actually managed to grab
an exposed horn of rock.
Incredibly, I walked away with fractured knuckle, a sprained wrist and thumb
and lacerations on my hands and legs. I had fallen around 300 vertical feet. At the
fastest, I must have been traveling somewhere between 20-30 mph. After letting
the gulley soften in the sun, I carefully returned to my pack, traversed back to
the south face and snowboarded back to tree line. --Fitz Cahall
Analysis of Accident: What knowledge and techniques will help prevent future accidents?
Often, the best Report to the American Alpine Club about a mountaineering accident
is made by the injured participant. This early spring solo climb of dangerous
North Sister was within the capabilities and ten years climbing experience of Fitz Cahall, author
of the Dirtbag Diaries sponsored by Patagonia. Fitz emailed to me: "The irony of
it is that I've authored 'how to move safely and efficiently in fourth class
terrain' for Climbing Magazine. I guess that day, I was leaning towards the
efficiently spectrum of things."
The imperatives of turning back in time to find a better way to the summit and keeping your summit pack on
your back are illustrated.
There have been several deaths at this point below this summit
of North Sister. --Robert Speik
Copyright© 2007 by Fitz Cahall and Robert Speik. All Rights Reserved.
Report filed by Fitz Cahall and Robert Speik for the 60th edition of ANAM to be published in 2008.
Point of Contact
BY FITZ CAHALL
Patagonia Field Reports
Winter 2007
Wax droplets bead on the snowboard's worn base. Beneath the work lamp's anemic
glow, I run the hot iron across it until I've filled the tiny nicks with an even
coat of wax. With my swollen hand, I steady the board across the workbench. With
my good hand, I scrape away the excess. The wax shavings float to the floor like
thick snowflakes.
The goal is standard: up another peak with another descent down a steep snow
ribbon. Its significance is not.
Two weeks ago, I tumbled down a snow gully studded with rocks. With bare hands,
I scratched at the snow until my fingernails bent back. Three hundred feet
later, I found myself clinging to a boulder along the gully's edge. Blood
trickled like snowmelt down the sleeve of my jacket. I stared at the drop off
just 20 feet below and listened to loose rocks chatter over the cliff top, then
whistle like bottle rockets accelerating into space. Since then, even as I walk
between work and home, my footing has felt insecure.
I run my index finger along the heel and toe edges. By touch, I search the metal
for the subtlest inconsistencies. Satisfied, I turn to my crampons and draw the
file across each dull point. I press the pink flesh of my thumb into each spike
just to be certain.
Morning begins in regular fashion: frozen hands warmed by a mug of black coffee.
As the sun breaks the horizon, I skin through the maze of spruce and pine.
Flustered by my approach, chickadees bounce anxiously between branches. The
whole forest seems nervous, and I fight off the urge to talk to myself.
Miles of skinning later, I'm at the base of the final, slender, snow band and
need to swap skins for crampons. I reassemble the split board, attach it to my
backpack and wrap the ice axe's leash around my wrist three times. My broken
knuckle and discolored thumb throb to the rhythm of my heart. The board extends
up from the pack like a great sail, and unsure of my balance, I lurch beneath
each fluctuation in the breeze. In the steep, exposed sections, I move more
quickly than normal, until I'm forced to stop and let my lungs catch up. The
snow is beginning to soften.
"I'm okay," I say aloud.
My hand uncontrollably tightens around the ice axe. Blood drains from beneath
the knuckles. I try to feel each sharpened crampon point bite into hard snow. I
flinch from the exposure and lean into the slope. I'm connected to this mountain
by the thinnest margin. It's not enough. Instinctively, I slide the glove from
my bad hand and place my bare fingers to the snow in the same manner that I
might reach out to find the reassuring reference of a wall in an unfamiliar dark
hallway. I fall into the burning rhythm of upward progress until there is no
more mountain left to climb.
Twenty minutes later, I'm strapped in above the 50-foot-wide snow ribbon I've
just climbed. Balanced entirely on the heel side, the board quivers with the
subtlest shifts in balance. Hardened fear softens. I drop in, cutting two quick
turns to check my speed. I feel the strength of the metal edge beneath me and
for the first time today, sense the connection that extends from my feet into
the snow, into mountain, all the way to the bedrock roots. With the gathering
speed, the doubts rattling in my ears are swallowed by the wind's roar until
they become only vague threats heard from the greatest distance. Then I stop
dancing between turns, leave the security of the edges and turn my board in the
direction of gravity. I let go and it's in this moment that the point of contact
is the strongest.
Copyright© 2007 by Fitz Cahall. All Rights Reserved
Biography: When he's not chasing his wife up backcountry skin tracks, writer Fitz Cahall produces the Dirtbag Diaries, an adventure podcast dedicated to untold stories of near misses, lift-changing experiences and humorous moments in wild places. Cahall prefers it when he is not the subject of his own stories. Listen to the Dirtbag Diaries at thedirtbag.libsyn.com, or on Patagonia's new blog. www.thecleanestline.com.
http://www.patagonia.com/usa/patagonia.go?assetid=23688
From the University of Washington, Department of
Communication Class notes:
Fitz Cahall: BA (journalism), 2002
I graduate in the March 2002 and currently reside
in Corvallis, Or. Since then I've been working as a freelance outdoor writer for
a variety of publications. I wanted to bring my journalism training to the world
of rock climbing and other adventure sports. It's been a struggle, but I finally
feel like I've started to turn a corner in my freelance business. This winter
(2007) I entered into the world of new media and launched a podcast. I
approached it more as a learning experience and an opportunity to explore a new
medium rather than a viable outlet for my work. Most of all, I had collected
some wonderful stories through the years that just didn't have a home in the
magazine world. They were intriguing tales, but often focused on regular people
not the sponsored athletes most outdoor athletes continually cover. I wanted to
give these stories a home. I thought I might get a few hundred hits. To my
complete surprise, it struck a chord out there in the Internet realm. We jumped
to thousands of downloads pretty quickly. Along the way, I got to take my
recording gear to a remote desert sandstone spire and participated in the first
ascent (a multi day climb) of the biggest rock spire in the country. It was wild
to have the mic rolling while hanging from ropes. After the second episode, the
Dirtbag Diaries exploded. Patagonia stepped forward to sponsor the show. Now I'm
teaming up with photographers to provide multimedia content for not only the
podcast but for various Internet sites both at home and abroad. It's been an
incredible leap in my career, which in the previous months I had considered
abandoning due to severe financial struggles.
You can check it out online at
http://thedirtbag.libsyn.com. Our most recent episode was a profile of
adventure photographer Corey Rich who I had covered in the past for
SPJ's Quill Magazine. His tale is truly inspiring for young journalists.
http://www.com.washington.edu/Program/alumni/notes00.html
Read more . . .
American Alpine Club
Oregon Section of the AAC
Accidents in North American Mountaineering