Story Published:
Jun 17, 2006 at 12:55 PM PDT
Story Updated:
Aug 31, 2006 at 8:27 AM PDT
PORTLAND - Two climbers were rescued Saturday by a
National Guard helicopter crew after they were injured in a
500-foot fall near the top of Mount Hood.
Aaron Dunlop, 31, of Newberg, and Jeremy Hawkins, 32, of Tigard,
were in fair condition at Oregon Health & Science University
Hospital in Portland, officials said.
A third climber in the party, Brad Wood, about 30, of Tigard,
walked off the 11,240-foot mountain, the highest peak in Oregon and
a popular destination for Pacific Northwest climbers.
Erik Broms of Portland Mountain Rescue was the leader of a
three-man "ready team" who were at a staging area called the
Hogsback, preparing to climb the final leg to the summit when he
saw the trio fall and slide down the ice.
"As soon as we saw them sliding my partner and I started
running down to where they were," Broms said.
Both Hawkins and Dunlop suffered multiple bruises and abrasions
and possibly broken bones, Broms said, and were drifting in and out
of consciousness as rescuers arrived. But both appeared to be alert
as they awaited the helicopter, he said.
It was the first sunny day in Oregon after a long stretch of
cloudy and rainy June weather, and ice coated the snow, Broms said.
"It was a day when you should have been a little more
cautious," he said. "They were doing eveyrthing right, but
sometimes somebody slips. It's an accident, it's not anybody's
fault."
It was too icy for the trio to brake or halt their slide with
their climbing equipment, Broms said.
The injured climbers were among three parties headed for the
summit Saturday morning. The lead party fell backward, hitting a
second party, and the mass of climbers then fell into a third
party, according to Detective Jim Strovink, spokesman for the
Clackamas County sheriff's office, the lead agency in Mount Hood
rescues.
The accident occurred near the area where an Air Force Reserve
helicopter crashed in May 2002 during another mountain rescue
operation. The crew survived the crash, which was captured live on
television. The helicopter had been sent to rescue the survivors of
a fall that sent nine climbers tumbling into a crevasse, killing
three of them.
Portland Mountain Rescue sends up "ready teams" every weekend
during peak climbing season, and Broms said he happened to be a
short distance from where the fall ended on Saturday. He estimated
it at about 500 feet from the summit.
There were about 40 people on the mountain at the time, Broms
said, a smaller number than usual for the time of year. Nearby
climbers included a U.S. Forest Service wilderness ranger.
A UH-60 Blackhawk helicopter from the Oregon Army National
Guard's 1042nd Medical Company with a crew of five, including a
medic, handled the rescue on Saturday, said Kay Fristad, National
Guard spokeswoman.
She said the Guard rescue team has been busy as the summer
climbing season arrives.
"We're on the mountain more than off," Fristad said. "This is
the time when the mountain is changing. The snow is softening, and
crevasses are forming. It's not a good time for climbers."