| 9- 10 GCSAR
|
Rescue Slides from Jonathan Hart of Scotland |
J. Hart |
| 9-11 |
All HMK students salute all Emergency Services workers. |
|
| 9- 21 |
All Grand County Fair Search and Rescue booth |
Dave and Barbara |
| 9- 26 GCSAR
|
Working with Search Dogs |
Nancy May |
| 10- 8 GCSAR
|
Leadership and OIC: The Reality of it |
Rex Tanner |
| 10- 24 GCSAR
|
Mock Incident |
TBerry |
| 11- 12 GCSAR |
CPR |
|
| 11- 26 GCSAR |
CPR |
|
| 12- 10 GCSAR |
Winter Rescue |
Eric Trenbeath |
| 12- 21 |
S. O. Party |
|
| |
| Incident Tally by
Month |
2002- J-0 F-3 M- 9 A- 8 M- 10 J-12[42] J-
5 A-7 S-7 O- 9 [70]
2001- J-0 F-2 M- 5 A-11 M- 8 J- 6 [32] J- 6 A-3 S-2
O- 2 [45] N-5 D-1 [51]
2000- J-2 F-4 M- 9 A-13 M- 14 J- 7 [49] J- 3 A-2 S-9
O- 7 [70] N-0 D-0 [70]
1999- J-1 F-1 M-15 A- 4 M- 11 J- 8 [40] J- 6 A-9 S-9
O-13 [77] N-7 D-2 [86]
1998- J-0 F-1 M- 5 A-18 M- 15 J- 3 [42] J-10 A-2 S-4
O- 9 [67] N-3 D-1 [71]
1997- J-4 F-6 M-10 A- 8 M- 16 J- 9 [53] J- 4 A-6 S-5
O- 9 [77] N-8 D-0 [85]
1996- J-4 F-5 M- 2 A-12 M- 14 J- 7 [44] J- 5 A-5 S-5
O- 6 [65] N-9 D-4 [78]
average: [43] |
02- 55 9- 6- 02 Door to door Explaining Bad Water
Something happened to part of the local culinary water system that
turned the water "bad."
We organized with the Fire Club and went door to door to notify the citizens
NOT to use their water except to flush the toilet. "Oh my," most said.
"We've already had dinner and done the dishes."
Samples were sent up-state to the lab and as of Monday 5 pm, nothing
has been said.
Comments:
Responders: Rex, TBerry, Sam, Jennie, Bego and some Fire Club folks
Flash Flooding in Canyonlands National
Park- Hummer as boat- frightening ride for a family
On Saturday, September 7, at approximately 4:15 pm, the
Island-in-the-Sky District of Canyonlands National Park was buffeted by high
winds and torrential rains that deposited 3/4" of water in under one hour.
There were extensive backcountry road wash-outs accompanied by
flash-flooding. The flash flooding was the most significant flooding
documented in the history of the Island in the Sky.
At approximately 6pm, a family of four from Provo, Utah, was driving up
Taylor Canyon. The four wheel drive road winds in and out of a dry wash.
At approximately 6 pm, the family saw a four inch curb of water approaching
them down the wash. Within a minute, the water had swelled up to mid-level
of the windshield of their 1998 Humvee and shortly thereafter was 10' deep.
At peak flow the wash was estimated to be flowing at approximately
2,000 cubic feet per second which is nearly double the current flow of the
Colorado River. The wash was approximately 300' wide at peak flow with a
water temperature of approximately 55 degrees.
The vehicle floated downstream for approximately 4 miles over the next
15 minutes at which time the family was able to exit the vehicle, get to
shore, and seek shelter in an alcove. During this process, the father
stated he had to swim with his 5 month old and 3 year old sons tucked under
his arms after exiting from a door while his wife was exiting through a
window.
Later in the night their cries for help were overheard by campers
nearby, who took them in for the night, and gave them a ride out to the
Island in the Sky Visitor Center the following morning.
The vehicle was recovered and is totaled. Vehicle loss is estimated
at $60,000.
The 100 mile White Rim backcountry road is currently closed to through
traffic. A damage assessment is being conducted on the backcountry road
system. Cost estimates for the repair of extensive damage will be
completed.
The Shafer Trail may take several months to repair and will remain
closed until repairs are done. It is hopeful that repairs at Upheaval
Bottom, Taylor Canyon and Lathrop Canyon can be completed within the next
week. Ranger Paul Downey was the Incident Commander. [Steve Swanke, RISKY]
GCSAR Rock Rescue training
9- 10- 02 "The Red Mist" by Jonathan Hart
One of the best classroom rock rescue trainings ever. And a bonus hit
for EMTs regarding all the latest on treating cold injuries in the cold.
Jonathan Hart from a Scottish Rescue Team spoke and showed slides. Their
group, formed in 1906, is the most active in Scotland, in all 4 seasons but
mostly in the winter cuz of the popularity of ice climbing on Ben Nevis.
The highest mountain around, it suffers from much bad weather from fast, wet
North Atlantic storms. Conditions and weather change wildly. They deal out
cold injuries alot. Says most accidents can be traced back to "bad
navigation." He's in America, staying with and studying a bunch of rescue
groups and their methods all over the country. Bloody hell.
9 - 11 A "Thank You" from the
HMK school--
A short and incredibly emotional Thank You to All The People in
Emergency Services gathering. The STUDENTS at HMK read some poetry, sang a
song and presented some art work with student signatures to each department
head. Principal Margaret Hopkin spoke briefly. We observed a moment of
silence in remembrance to the Ground Zero sadness. Moab's finest presented
the colors.
Comments: Students helping the adults feel good. Totally awesome.
Responders: Sheriff's Office, Moab Police, American Legion, Search and
Rescue, the National Park Service, BLM Fire, Hiway Patrol, Veterans of
Foreign Wars, Moab Valley Fire Dept.
Probably 60 or so of us, all dressed up.
02- 56 9- 11- 02 Body
Recovery Colorado River
GCSAR was requested by the Sheriff's Office to drive the River Rescue
Boat to recover a body that had washed ashore along the river near Rocky
Rapid.
Comments: Ick. Turns out he had a small caliber bullet hole in the back of
his head. Oh my.....
Responders: Bego, Sam, Nancy, Shalla
02- 57 9- 12- 02 ATV
Rollover Pritchett Canyon
Mostly a replay of 02- 30 in May except this was an ATV rollover.
About 1:30 pm.
Two guys out ATV riding when one crashes over backwards at the Rock
Pile. It was a jeep party just ahead of them that continued out to the
south until they could get cell reception with dispatch- about 3:15 pm. We
were paged, EMS was paged and Careflight put on standby. Frank got LZ
coordinates from Well's book.
We responded shortly later with EMS and Careflight was asked to
launch. As with 02-30, Careflight got there first cuz getting even an ATV
up Pritchett Canyon is difficult. The same pilot landed in the skid tracks
he'd made in May (a statement about how much rain we've had). As they were
packaging the subject, our folks arrived to help carry a thousand feet to
the helo.
Comments: Jennie Tuft figured out a pizza delivery to ICP- nice. As usual,
there is no communication OUT of Pritchett. Sam and Dick went in from the
south in the Bronco and got clear to Yellow Hill but no commo there either.
The team in Pritchett HAS to wear earphones, have a radio on "NLET" channel
and use the helo as communications relay. There just isn't any other way.
Persuasive argument for a satellite phone.
Responders: Rex, Bego, Jeremy, Lee, Jim D, Sam, Dick, Dave, Frank, Kevin,
Shaun
Gary Haynes brought out Jonathan Hart, the Scottish rescue guy visiting
locally.
9 - 13 Fri Homecoming Parade
Traffic detail with Moab City Police. Next time we need at least 6 of
us to show up, please.
English: (from Reader's Digest)
It is wrong to ever split an infinitive.
Contractions aren't necessary.
The passive voice is to be avoided.
Prepositions are not the words to end sentences with.
Be more or less specific.
One word sentences? Eliminate.
Who needs rhetorical questions?
Exaggeration is a billion times worse than understatement.
"It isn't pollution that's harming the environment. It's the impurities in
our air and water that are doing it." - George W. Bush.
02- 58 9- 16- 02 Evidence
Search
Investigators Brewer and White had 8 of us out looking for "anything"
that might be connected with the the body recovered in incident 02- 56.
Nancy and Shalla. Grid searches thru the Tammys and brush. Hiking in mud
along the shorelines (really high quality river mud tho), cruising the
shores on the Jet Skis (both of which had problems). Underwater metal
detector.
Comments: Nope. The river is quite a bit higher than it was on the day of
the event.
Responders: Matt, Sam, Dick, Dave, Nancy, Shalla, Lee (a retired
gentleman), Bego Shaun, Jeff Curt Brewer and his boy White, Steve Brownell
02- 59 9- 19- 02 Rock Topples,
Canadians Topple with it Determination Towers
At first it seemed like this was a climbing accident on Determination
Towers. No.
Mr. and Mrs. Ross from Alberta clambered up onto a small summit of rock
about 30 feet high for pictures. The rock crumbled from under them and down
they went. Mrs. Ross scraped her arm. Mr. Ross tumbled, breaking some ribs
and banging his head.
His friends loaded him into an SUV and they drove out a ways toward US
191. After a bit, the pain was too much and they called for help.
Comments:
Responders: Brad, Rex, Sam, Bego, Dave, Jeremy, Kent, James Ward
Grand County Fair at the Spanish Trail
Arena Sept 20, 21
Dave and Barbara Fincham built and staffed our Search and Rescue
booth. Thank you big.
Sheriff Nyland, Happy Morgan, Rex Tanner and many others politicked
like mad.
Yummie pies and jams, Lois Nelson's Afghan, a JC Borders pastel, loads
of cool stuff.
02- 60 9- 21- 02 Biker Down
SRBT
Broken collar bone in the weird gully at the head of the Abyss. In and
out. Slick. Rock and Roll.
Comments: It is perhaps better if we stage our stuff in the parking lot.
More room, safer, level, etc.
Responders: Nancy, Sam, Jeff, Bego, Shawn, Lee, Jim G.
Guest appearance by Russell Pierce.
02- 61 9- 28- 02 Biker Down
SRBT
This guy went over the handlebars and came down straight on his head.
Bad ju-ju, at least it was in sand. The cell phone call out mentioned
tingling in his arms if he moved his head.
We arrived with the EMT. In about a minute the EMT requested the
Careflight helicopter cuz of the nerve thing and swelling at the base of the
skull. Oh -oh.
Comments: A week later we learn that he compressed C1 and C2 in a bad way.
Responders: Dick, Dave, Rex, Bego, Dean, Shawn, Sam
Canyonlands National Park (UT) Rescue;
Life Saved
On the afternoon of September 23, rangers were notified that a 56 year old
male mountain biker from Norwich, Connecticut, who was on a multiple day
backcountry bicycle trip, was in distress - ill, vomiting, unable to
urinate, diminished consciousness - on the remote White Rim Road. A medical
helicopter was dispatched and transported the patient to Grand Junction,
Colorado. The patient had drank approximately 2 gallons of water during the
morning ride. He was suffering from water intoxication, which probably
would have been fatal without rapid transport, clinical evaluation and
follow-up treatment. The rescue was aided by the biking party possessing a
mobile telephone and GPS unit in the Canyonlands backcountry. [Steve Swanke,
Incident Commander]
02- 62 10- 6- 02 Bag and Rope
on Wall: Analysis
Somebody saw a rope hanging on the vertical sandstone wall across the
river from Goose Island and thot it "looked suspicious." Watched it all
day. It didn't move.
After dark, we responded in the River Rescue boat. Just nicked a rock
passing Canyonlands By Night. Hiked up to the base of the wall to discover
someone's "project." In other words, two climbers were working on a route
and took the day off, leaving their ropes hanging. This is quite common on
first ascents.
Comments:
Responders: Matt, Sam, Bego, Jeff, Steve and the ubiquitous Park Ranger
Haynes.
02- 63 10- 11- 02 Klondike
Bluffs Temporarily Lost Biker (TLB)
This 74 year old dude with a hip replacement took a wrong turn and got
lost down a drainage. He cell phoned 911 and we responded.
By the time we got to our usual staging area he had called dispatch to
say that he'd found his way. Shortly later, there he was, pedaling up the
road, passing all the younger bikers.
Comments:
Responders: Rex, Sam, Bego, TBerry, Jim D, Lee
02- 64 10- 11- 02 "We're on the
Kokopelli Trail but we don't know where?"
A weak cell phone call from 2 young lads. Said they were definitely ON
the Kokopelli Trail but didn't know where, that they were north of Fisher
Valley, east of 128 and the river and they were up on a high point. Clues.
We responded up the dirt from Dewey with 4 wheelers and a Bronco. Two
4-wheelers were sent out on the piece of single track (really an old 2
track) that crosses Cottonwood Canyon. Later we were all cruising over the
top and down toward the top of Rose Garden Hill. There they were.
Turns out, they turned uphill in Fisher Valley instead of down Onion
Creek.
Comments: As usual, they blamed the "guidebook." So much for personal
responsibility and navigation. However, the maps in that particular guide
are the worst for concise. Said they thought they could do a 5 hour ride in
2 hours.
Responders: TBerry, Jennie, Sam, Jeremy, Bego, Nancy, Shawn
02- 65 10- 12- 02 Amasa
Back Biker Crash
10-22d before it got going. Subject walked out after cutting his
eyelid in a fall..
Comments:
Responders: Rex, Frank, Nancy, TBerry, Lee, Jeremy, Jim G
Subject: Rescue Response Gear LLC
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02- 66 10- 13- 02
Recovery A Boundaries Problem
First, a few words on the boundaries. (1)
Was this in Grand or San Juan County?
Turns out, by GPS, the subject was in Grand County by about 160 feet. (2)
Was the subject on BLM land or National Park land?
(3) Did we need 500 or 600-foot ropes? 600 by a few tens of feet said
Nancy the surveyor.
Tragedy struck a group of Colorado University
students camped at Island in the Sky near the head of the west fork of Shafer Canyon. Late at night as the campfire burned low,
Evan Guillaume, 20, a student from the University of Colorado, picked up his
sleeping bag and walked off to find a place to sleep. It was the last
time he was seen alive.
When his friends missed him the next morning, they went looking.
They were unable to locate him. Later, they spotted a sleeping bag on the talus below. It was then that they phoned 911
to report a missing camper.
TBerry, Alyssa and Louis Manson went to investigate. GCSAR
was paged out for a search. Shortly, TBerry called us back to the shed
for stand-by. A few minutes later, TBerry said to come out with all
the rope and cliff equipment. We had a good idea, at that point, what
our assignment would be. In addition, Rig
Master A224 loaded up ("...and about 4000 feet of rope.") from his SAR cache.
Nine GCSAR members and 3 NPS employees then proceeded to rig a 600-foot
lowering and raising. It was by the book except for one rarely-used
technique. We used a vehicle winch with a soft grab onto the haul
line.
Gary Haynes became
Ops and everybody buzzed around their multiple jobs. Lots was rigged,
learned and taught in a few moments. This first then that, that line of
force goes there, this material is strong enough for the task, change that
knot to a different one because, make the generator and lights work for
after sunset, edge pro and the perfect application for the Arizona Vortex.
A thousand thoughts all running together...with safe completion of the
difficult task as the ultimate goal.
After awhile, it all came together in a safety
briefing. Specific tasks were assigned, concerns aired, communications and safety reviewed.
A rescuer was lowered down
the cliff to the subject. 45 minutes later, rescuer and subject were raised
to the top using the electric winch on the front of a truck. A
similar system had been used during Reed Thorne's class.
Comments:
The overland route to this subject at the bottom of the cliff would have
taken hours and hours of toil and many more folks. It was decided that the
rope way was both faster and safer in the larger picture.
Responders: Steve Young, Gary Haynes and A5lyssa V2an S5chmus from the
Natural Park Service.
Rex, Matt, Frank, Sam, Nancy, Bego, Lee, Jim G, Jennie from GCSAR
Louis Manson and Steve Rotor White from GCSO
Canyonlands National Park
(UT) Falling Fatality
Evan Guillaume, 20, a student from the University of Colorado, fell
to his death from the west rim of the Middle Fork of Shafer Canyon in the
park's Island in the Sky District early on the morning of Sunday, October
13. Guillaume had been camping with a group of students, and was last seen
sitting near his tent on the canyon rim at approximately 1:30 a.m. When
members of the group awoke in the morning, Guillaume was nowhere to be
found. His friends searched for him, but without luck. A member of their
party then called 911 on a cell phone and rangers were sent to the scene.
Ranger Steve Young spotted Guillaume's body at the base of the vertical
cliff after a brief search. Guillaume had fallen almost 500 feet. A
multi-agency team of rescuers from Grand County and the National Park
Service completed the technical body recovery in darkness. An investigation
is being conducted and the body is in Salt Lake City for an autopsy. Ranger
Steve Young was incident commander. [Submitted by Steve Swanke,
District Ranger]
02- 67 10- 17- 02 Broken
Cowboy Book Cliffs- Bogart and She Canyons
Must have been a cell phone call from the top of Sego Canyon at the
Indian Reservation fence. Deputy Brent Pace raced up there to
talk to the RP.
We responded as did Care Flight from Grand Jct. Coordinates were
generated on the computer for Care Flight using the geographical names.
GCSAR units and 2 Thompson First Responders staged our stuff at the
bottom of Sego Canyon. We were to wait to see if Care Flight could land and
service the subject. Yes, they did.
Comments: Would have been a long access problem with ATVs, way up in the
Book Cliffs.
Responders: Lori, Rex, Frank, Bego, TBerry, Jeff, Sam, Mark
02- 68 10- 18- 02 Lost
Biker Old Arth's Road- Head of 7 Mile
Barry called on his cell phone to announce he was lost. He had left
his car "at the first parking lot north of Moab" which turned out to be the
lower Gemini parking near the Bar M on Hwy 191. His intention was a short
loop ride as he started at 4 pm. At 10 pm, in a bright moon, he said he was
not on any road but was pushing his bike, "headed for two buttes, one larger
than the other." This had to be the Monitor and Merrimac. He had passed a
sign that said TNT. Huh? TBerry said this was a drilling company sign but
it's location was unknown. Said he was maybe 2 miles from a road, meaning
313. We told him to get ON a road and head west, moon on his left shoulder.
We sent out Nancy in her truck, down from 313 to the drill pad, then
north toward the 7 Mile rim in the area called Arth's Pasture. TBerry and
Jim Davis went out on ATVs from MP 16 on 313, into the head of 7 Mile. Jon
Sering 13 B 61 joined in the search in the Arth's area. Meanwhile, Sam and
I stayed up on 313, watching everyone's lights appear and disappear, doing
maps and cell phones.
Barry still had some cell phone battery left so periodic phone calls
were made to see if he was on a road yet or had he seen any of our lights.
Yes and no and yes. Awhile later he called us to say he'd found a brass cap
survey marker that said T 25 S, R 10 E, Sec 26, quarter corner. A quick
glance at the map revealed that he meant R 19 E. So we told him to stay
there. The ATV guys established their position relative to his and drove
right over to him. Sam and I picked him up in my truck.
Comments: Neither the 7 1/2 minute maps nor the Moab West map have any of
the maze of roads in the Arth's Pasture / Head of 7 Mile marked on them.
The helpful publication here is Jack Bickers book 40 Grand Trails from the
Deadhorse Point Road. The map in here isn't that detailed but it does show
all the roads. Barry probably would have come out somewhere on 313 on his
own in a couple of hours, max tired and out of water.
Responders: TBerry, Jim D, Nancy, Sam, Bego, Jon 13 B 61
02- 69 10- 20- 02 Broken
Biker Fat Tire Festival Downhill Race Moab Rim Trail
George crashed on the down hill, breaking his tib and fib.
Race officials sent an EMT down and called 911. We responded up the
Portal Vistas Chairlift with the EMTs, a Stokes litter and the wheel. Over
the top and down 1/4 mile to the scene.
There were many helpful bikers to pull the Stokes back uphill to the
top of the chairlift.
Comments: Some of those downhillers are in the air more than on the ground.
Responders: Bego, TBerry, Nancy, Dean, Shawn, Sam, Dave, Barbara
02- 70 10- 26- 02 Broken
Biker Way up ta the Gold Bar Rim
A perfect afternoon for riding ATVs up to a high rim, but no.
A cell phone call to 911 said a biker had a broken clavicle and some
kind of low sugar problem. We discussed CareFlight from Grand Jct, Arches
Helicopters locally and our usual ground attack of ATVs.
One more phone call to the subject. He said he was in a private jeep,
traveling out, bye, bye.
Comments:
Responders: Matt, TBerry, Dick, Jennie, Nancy, Shawn, Bego and Alicia
Natural Bridges National
Monument Rescue
On the afternoon of September 12, a park visitor reported having
seen "two elderly hikers stuck in a flashflood" at the bottom of White
Canyon. They were last seen "standing chest deep" in a swift current in the
vicinity of Sipapu Bridge.
The park had received over one inch of precipitation since 8 a.m. that
morning and was experiencing heavy monsoon storm cells and lightening
strikes at the time of the report.
A rescue team led by chief ranger Ralph Jones entered White Canyon
approximately ten minutes later, while maintenance chief Larry Turk remained
on the canyon rim in order to maintain line-of-sight radio communications.
Flood conditions forced Jones' team to traverse high-angle rock above
the riverbed while searching for the hikers. Jones located the pair - two
German nationals in their early 60's - on the opposite side of the river,
approximately a quarter mile downstream from Sipapu Bridge. They were wet
and cold, but otherwise in fair condition.
Rangers were able to extricate the husband by fording floodwaters
and roping up for the climb out of White Canyon. His wife was much weaker,
however, and had to ford the river three times in order to reach easier
terrain upstream. When she began having trouble negotiating wet slickrock
with her footwear, a park rescuer swapped out her own hiking boots for the
woman's tennis shoes.
After safely returning to the Sipapu Bridge parking lot, the two
non-English speaking visitors profusely thanked their rescuers with hugs and
handshakes.
Park visitors are cautioned to avoid trails linking the canyons'
bridges during periods of precipitation. Due to language barriers, the
couple had missed both verbal and signed information to that effect. The
incident has prompted staff to evaluate additional strategies for improving
cross-cultural communication. [Submitted by Greg Dudgeon,
Superintendent, Natural Bridges NM]
Black Canyon Of The Gunnison
National Park Follow-up on Search for Visitor
The body of 49-year-old Martin Larsen was found at the bottom of
Chasm View on the park's steep and rugged north rim shortly before noon on
September 19. Larsen was reported missing on September 16 and had been the
subject of a search that involved air-scent dogs, a helicopter and a
15-person NPS search team. A technical rock climbing team was dispatched to
the area on September 19 to descend Cruise Gully. Crew members discovered
Larsen's body. It's estimated that he fell about 2,000 feet. [Phil
Zichterman, Public Information Officer, Black Canyon of the Gunnison NP]
Comments: One of the dogs was Shalla. Nancy tells an interesting story
about this search.
Grand Canyon National
Park Ranger Injured in Backcountry Accident
On September 17, ranger Chuck Sypher fell approximately 50 feet
while hiking in a remote area of the park while on backcountry patrol.
Sypher was on the fourth day of a seven day backcountry patrol of the Kanab
Creek drainage in a remote western part of the park. Ranger Michael Grate
and a volunteer accompanied him.
Grate was able to summon help via satellite phone. Initial reports
indicated that Sypher had sustained serious head injuries. Two
ranger/paramedics responded on the park helicopter. An Arizona DPS rescue
helicopter and a Classic Lifeguard air ambulance were also dispatched.
Rangers reached Sypher's location at the bottom of a narrow canyon and
found him conscious,
alert and in stable condition. He was extracted from the canyon via
helicopter short-haul, then transferred to the Classic Lifeguard helicopter
and flown to Flagstaff Medical Center.
Sypher miraculously sustained only lacerations, bruises and head wounds
and was released from the hospital the following day. There were no
fractures or internal injuries.
Rangers were able to respond quickly due to mandatory requirements that
satellite communications be employed on backcountry patrols and that rangers
on all highly technical patrols be accompanied by partners. [ Sherrie
Collins, Incident Commander, Grand Canyon NP]
Comments: Satellite phones and short hauls out of canyons. Yes and yes.
Grand Canyon National Park
(AZ) Helicopter Short-Haul Rescue
On October 26, Margaret Evans, 61, sustained a possible ankle
fracture while hiking on the remote Nankoweap Trail. The Grand Canyon Field
Institute guide who was with her provided immediate care and used a
satellite telephone to contact the park. Due to the extreme exposure of the
trail and lack of a safe helispot nearby, rangers decided to employ a
short-haul rescue procedure to extract her. NPS Helicopter 210 was used to
short-haul her to a staging helispot two miles away. Involved in the
operation were pilot Borden Miller, spotter Mark Murray, ranger-IEMT Greg
Moore, ops chief Sean Cox, and incident commander KJ Glover. [Submitted
by Ken Phillips, SAR Coord]
Yosemite National Park
(CA) Technical Rescue from Lost Brothers Climbing Route
On the afternoon of September 28, park dispatch received an
emergency cell phone call from a man who reported that his climbing partner
was injured on the Lost Brother on the south wall of Yosemite Valley. Paul
Minault, 55, and his two partners, all from the Sacramento area, were
climbing the historic (and seldom climbed) route when Minault took a leader
fall and ended up hanging injured several feet above his belayer's stance.
Minault's partners cut him lose from the ropes, secured him at the belay
stance, and placed the cell phone call to get help. Rangers and YOSAR team
members climbed about 1,000 feet above the Valley floor to Minault's
position and began medical treatment. Minault was lowered about 100 feet to
a more secure location on a ledge just as darkness fell. It had been raining
periodically all day and the heavy cloud cover prevented using a helicopter
short haul to evacuate Minault. The extremely loose rock made a lowering
operation very hazardous. Minault's condition was stable, so SAR tech/parkmedic
Keith Tampa and YOSAR team member Micah Dash stayed on the cliff through
the night, monitoring his condition. Early the next morning, the park
contract helicopter short hauled Minault off the cliff to El Capitan Meadow.
He was then taken by ambulance to the Yosemite Medical Clinic, where he was
diagnosed with a pneumothorax and a broken hip. He was flown out of Yosemite
Valley by helicopter ambulance for further medical treatment. [Ed Visnovske,
Park Ranger/Incident Commander]
New Device Translates Dogs Bark into
Short Phrases
Harvard University recently presented the 2002 IG Nobel Peace Prize to Keita
Sato, President of Takara Co., Dr. Matsumi Suzuki, President of Japan
Acoustic Lab, and Dr. Norio Kogure, Executive Director, Kogure Veterinary
Hospital, for promoting peace and harmony between the species by inventing
Bow-Lingual, a computer-based automatic dog-to-human language translation
device. The Search and Rescue world will be surprised to learn that if this
tongue-in-cheek award is true, dog barks can be translated to Japanese. A
microphone on the dogs collar transmits to a handheld radio which then
translates the dog bark into the appropriate Japanese phrase on a display
screen. Perhaps in the future if human-speech can be translated to barks
and coupled with GPS radios, we can do without dog handlers all together
(ok, they still might be needed to drive the dog to the search.) It's worth
visiting the site at least for a good laugh.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/business/2285509.stm BBC article (in English)
that describes the device in some detail.
Websites for Man-Trackers Here are two websites courtesy of the
man-tracking world.
http://members.aol.com/varfee/mastssite/ C.A.S.T. (Footwear & Tire Track
Impression Evidence)
http://www.identicatorinc.com/pindex.html - product = LE25 Inkless shoe
print - the chemical pad and reactive paper shown at SARTI training
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