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JohnRoe
Trad climber
State College, PA
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Topic Author's Original Post - May 16, 2010 - 06:11pm PT
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(This is a long TR. Short version: I fell on the Prow last Wednesday and needed a rescue. Everyone involved was extraordinarily skilled and helpful - many, many thanks. If you want the long version, just read on.)
This trip got started in January at the AMS meeting. I posted here to meet other mathematicians who are climbers, and as a result got together with Aaron. A few beers later we had a plan to climb the Prow in May.
I flew out to California last Monday. The Sierra landscape was socked in under cloud westward from Mono Lake, but the weather was forecast to brighten up. We sort gear in Berkeley on Monday and set out for the Valley early Tuesday morning. The rocks are beautiful under a fresh dusting of snow as we shoulder the pigs in the Ahwahnee parking lot and prepare to toil up to the base of the route.
When we get there it is early afternoon. One party is retreating from the Prow - they must have had a miserable night up there in the late-season snow. We fix pitches 1 and 2 and then head back to the base where we share the bivi spot with a party of three getting ready to head up to Dinner Ledge.
Next day we jug and haul and then Aaron leads pitch 3 to sloping Anchorage Ledge. We plan to climb a couple of pitches above and then spend the night on the portaledge here. After a break for energy bars and Gatorade I set off up pitch 4. This begins with a slightly overhanging bolt ladder (one bolt hangerless) and then continues up some C2 terrain to a rib and the belay. The first placement above the ladder seems to be a flared pod, with what looks like a bomber green alien placement about three feet out of reach. I place a #1 camalot in the pod - three lobes look good - and bounce test it gently, moderately, and then really jump up and down on the daisy chain. It holds. Damn. Better move up on it.
Transferring my weight to the #1 I try to "float smoothly up the aiders" as instructed by CMac. But not smoothly enough! I guess I must have leaned out on the piece a little, there is a soft pop and I am weightless. There's no time to think - but if I'd had time I would have told myself that this is a short, clean fall, factor maybe 0.4, down slightly overhanging rock onto a bolt. Mathematically, nothing can go wrong. Right?
My right foot hits the wall and I scream. "BRING ME DOWN, AARON! I'VE BROKEN MY ANKLE!" A fast lower and I am lying on Anchorage Ledge again in an almost fetal position. The angle of the ledge, which seemed so inconvenient a few minutes ago, is now suddenly comforting as it folds me into the wall and away from the edge. I clip a daisy chain and another sling from my harness to the power point. My right foot is splayed out unnaturally and wedged against the haul bag. The ankle is grossly deformed and feels like jelly - it seems to have no stability and any movement causes me to cry out in pain. Aaron and I discuss what to do next. With one person unable to move, three pitches up the route and then a lot of fourth class terrain and talus slopes back to the trail, we are going to need some help. Aaron gets his cellphone and calls 911.
The response is instant. Within minutes Aaron is talking to Moose to plan the logistics of the rescue, and we're told that a team is making speed up to the Column. Aaron fixes one of our lines, ties both together and throws them slightly into the wind. The double-length line sails free, falls cleanly and lands exactly at the base of the route. One of the blessings of the day.
An hour later we can see a team gathering at the base. Aaron is catechized by phone about his climbing experience and the methods he has used to fix and join the lines. I guess the answers must have been satisfactory because within minutes rescuers are jugging up to us. The first to arrive is Jesse McGahey, trailing a long static line, followed by Matt Stark bringing the medical kit and the blessed morphine. By now the initial adrenalin is wearing off, I'm shivering and in shock despite putting on every layer I can find, and the pain is getting worse. I need that stuff.
Matt sets up an IV and calls the clinic for morphine authorization. Given the OK, he injects 4mg via IV. At first I don't notice anything and then, very suddenly, there's a strong reaction - slow, deep, gasping breaths, weird feeling in the chest...apparently this is not supposed to happen. The faces around me look seriously alarmed. Matt injects an antiemetic. Slowly the reaction passes, to be succeeded by a pleasant wooziness. Time to realign and splint the leg, says Matt. I know we have to do this, though I'm not looking forward to it. Between them, Matt and Jesse pull a little traction, straighten my foot out, and secure it in a temporary splint. There's a fair amount of screaming during this process but as soon as they have me stable in the splint, I can manage the pain.
We have two choices: either an assisted lower now, or bring up a litter. If we do the assisted lower, can I keep my right leg from swinging into the wall? I reckon that it's worth trying. The lower is set up with Jesse lowering, Aaron belaying on a separate line, and me clipped in a few feet higher than Matt. I scoot around on my butt to try to get myself over the edge and we're off.
The lower is easier than I'd feared. It's important to forget the standard technique of leaning back against the wall. Instead, I swing sideways to the wall with my good foor on the inside, so that I'm always able to fend off any contact with the broken foot. This works pretty well and it is not long before we are at the base where Werner and it seems a dozen or more other rescuers have gathered. I wasn't able to catch everyone's name but I wish I had so that I could thank everyone personally here. The whole team was encouraging, professional, and just amazing. I am so grateful to all of you.
The high angle part of the journey was over, but maybe the wildest ride was yet to come. For the next hour or two I am lowered in a wheeled litter over a thousand feet of fourth class, talus slopes, and boulder-strewn forest. For the whole way there are two ropes belaying the litter and about six people maneuvering it down, with other teams running on ahead, setting up the next anchors, scouting the line as darkness falls, and switching with litter-bearers who need to rest for a spell. Down on the bike path we are met by an ambulance which takes me to the clinic, where X-rays confirm a bimalleolar fracture. The next day the ankle will be reset at the hospital in Modesto using a plate and 8 screws. Time to start the rehab process.
A lesson for me is how unpredictable aid falls are. There was nothing to indicate that this would be a bad one and I still can't think what it can have been that my foot caught. Perhaps I swung out from the wall and slammed back in, or perhaps my foot caught on a little edge or even on a bolt. Anyhow, I didn't switch quickly enough from the body tension needed to move up on aiders to the relaxation needed for a safe fall. With muscles relaxed I might just have shrugged it off.
Oh, and another lesson is that YOSAR are awesome. Of course I knew that in theory already, though I'd hoped never to experience it in practice. But I'm glad it's true.
JohnR
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labrat
Trad climber
Nevada City, CA
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May 16, 2010 - 06:25pm PT
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Nice report. YOSAR rocks again!
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rick d
climber
ol pueblo, az
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May 16, 2010 - 06:27pm PT
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YER GONNA .......live?
hey- that does not sound right???????????
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Ihateplastic
Trad climber
It ain't El Cap, Oregon
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May 16, 2010 - 06:45pm PT
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After the very sad news of last week this is a very welcome rescue story.
I bet you must be spinning the seconds over and over in your mind wondering how such a minor fall could be so devastating. Makes us all think a bit...
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High Fructose Corn Spirit
Gym climber
Full Silos of Iowa
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May 16, 2010 - 07:24pm PT
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John- Thanks for posting up.
Now you just need to heal. Quickly. So you can get back on that horse. Bad horse!
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MisterE
Social climber
Across Town From Easy Street
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May 16, 2010 - 07:51pm PT
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Good job on getting yourself down. I know that must have been a difficult decision, but it probably saved everyone a lot of effort. Props to Werner & YOSAR for another job well done.
Hope you heal up soon! Thanks for the report.
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neebee
Social climber
calif/texas
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May 16, 2010 - 07:57pm PT
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hey there john.... say, oh my... i am soooo glad you made it through all this....
i can not read it now... got to walk the ol' pup-dog, but i will be
back to do so...
just wanted to put in my best wishes to you...
god bless...
get well soon...
:)
*cheers to werner and the rescue team...
:)
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altelis
Mountain climber
DC
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May 16, 2010 - 08:19pm PT
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t*r, he mentions he's given an antiemetic which makes it sound like it wasn't a hypersensitivity reaction...
i would guess then they weren't trying to interfere with the morphine or with an immune response at all....
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SteveW
Trad climber
The state of confusion
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May 16, 2010 - 10:43pm PT
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Wow, John. Great report. Too bad about the
circumstances. Hooray again for YOSAR!!!
Hope you heal up soon and get out there again!
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Mark Hudon
Trad climber
Hood River, OR
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May 16, 2010 - 10:49pm PT
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Gotta love YOSAR, eh?
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msiddens
Trad climber
Mountain View
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May 16, 2010 - 11:02pm PT
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WOW- lord bless YoSar. Heal well and soon.
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Ghost
climber
A long way from where I started
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May 16, 2010 - 11:09pm PT
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Hi John
Sorry to hear about the accident. But what can you do? Not climb?
Thanks to Jesse and crew and the Yosar guys for bringing another brother back to safety.
D
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GDavis
Social climber
SOL CAL
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May 16, 2010 - 11:31pm PT
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Geez, every time I hear a well written story on a rescue it blows my mind how good YOSAR is. What an incredible thing to have them in our little playground??
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Lambone
Ice climber
Ashland, Or
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May 17, 2010 - 05:54am PT
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Bummer John,
glad you made it down ok, best wishes for a quick recovery!
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steveA
Trad climber
bedford,massachusetts
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May 17, 2010 - 06:59am PT
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I left the Valley on the 13th. While there, I said hello to John Dill and Werner. John was working; as always- a happy workaholic. We all owe alot to the Yosar team! Hope you heal up well.
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Jaybro
Social climber
Wolf City, Wyoming
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May 17, 2010 - 10:07am PT
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Yow! It only takes a second. Happy healing.Glad everything went right for you.
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Ken Zemach
Trad climber
Redwood City, CA
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May 17, 2010 - 10:29am PT
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I've had an allergic reaction to morphine before. The problem is: you don't know you're going to have one until you get morphine, which is not something most of us go out trying on purpose. For me, the shot was in the arm (collapsed lung, about to get chest tube). My arm turned prickly and red, and red bumps started moving up my arm as the morphine went through. They administered epinephrine and that did the trick. Since YOSAR had something in the bag, I'm guessing maybe it isn't all that uncommon?
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Roxy
Trad climber
CA Central Coast
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May 17, 2010 - 10:41am PT
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woo hoo YOSAR!
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rlf
Trad climber
Josh, CA
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May 17, 2010 - 10:46am PT
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Allergic reactions to opiates can be very, very serious and even life threatening.
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Mike Bolte
Trad climber
Planet Earth
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May 17, 2010 - 10:54am PT
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Thanks for the story! Heal up. YOSAR and the climbing rangers: two thumbs up.
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