Wednesday, June 29, 2011

Badassery

In the mornings I read incident reports for all public parks in the nation. They have taught me a few things.

1) There's a suicide or an attempted suicide almost every day in public parks.
2) If it weren't for rangers and trained rescuers there would also be a lot of dead hikers and climbers in the parks.
3) Water and cold are deadly.
4) Some people are just bad ass. Case in point:
On Tuesday, a 52-year-old woman headed out from the Farewell Gap trailhead on a solo day hike as part of her training for an ultra-marathon. She hiked up Farewell Canyon, crossing Franklin Creek on a snow bridge. On her return trip, the snow bridge collapsed underneath her and she fell into the creek. She was swept downstream under the snow for 30 to 40 feet before being able to stop herself. She stood up in the creek under the snow, but had no access to the surface. Using her hands, she dug through about five feet of snow and created a small hole, then threw her backpack out of the hole. It was seen there by other visitors, who went to examine the pack and found the woman under the snow nearby. By that time, she'd been trapped in the creek under snow for over three hours and was hypothermic and incoherent. One person pulled her out while another went back to the trailhead to summon help; the other members of the group helped warm her. Rangers and a park helicopter with a medic on board were dispatched to the scene. When the rangers arrived, the woman declined either evacuation or medical assistance. The rangers helped her return to the trailhead. [Submitted by Dana Dierkes, Public Affairs Officer]

1 comment:

Diverse Shelving said...

Never count an old woman out. This is a great report of elderly "Badassery."