...information was received that the climber was approximately five feet from the edge on a cornice when it gave way.That's a nice picture, above, but I guarantee that it's not as pretty right now. It's rainy (i.e. snowy in the mountains), overcast (i.e. socked in at high elevations), breezy (i.e. howling up high), and getting dark. Wishing the victim and searchers-rescuers the best of luck.
A helicopter from J&L Aviation responded to the area and located a 50-year-old male on a 45-degree snow slope near the bottom of the crater. The medical condition of the climber is unknown at this time although he is blowing an emergency whistle.
Followup: OregonLive has another article, with some nice link resources. The above photo was clearly taken in mid to late summer; note the lack of snow. The view is ENE, and the peak in the right distance is Mt. Adams, the only Cascade peak that has ever seen mining operations. Native sulfur from fumeroles near the top has been mined in the past, though I don't know that was ever profitable. I do know it wasn't profitable in the long run.
Followup, 7:00 PM 2/16: Sadly, he didn't make it. Helicopter rescue crews had to back off in the face of windy, stormy conditions. When I heard that on a local news break last night (Yes, I have been watching the Olympics), I was afraid this might be the outcome.
I heard about him this morning. Amazes me that people don't realize how dangerous it is to get that close to an edge with such a steep slope/undercutting. You'd think common sense would tell them it is unstable. It's equivalent to standing on an embankment overhang of a fast moving river.
ReplyDeleteApparently this has happened before, with a man on a snowmachine. I'd hate to see them close this area off because of the poor judgment of a select few.
Hopefully this will end well and they can get to him today. I cannot imagine what he went through last night in the cold, and he has been in my thoughts since I heard about the incident.