Man amputates arm, hikes to safety

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Amanzi
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Man amputates arm, hikes to safety

#1 Postby Amanzi » Fri May 02, 2003 9:17 am

ARON RALSTON, 27, of Aspen, was in serious condition late Thursday at a hospital in Grand Junction, Colo.
Ralston was climbing Saturday in Blue John Canyon, adjacent to Canyonlands National Park in far southwestern Utah, when a 200-pound boulder fell on him, pinning his right arm, authorities said.
He ran out of water on Tuesday and on Thursday morning, he decided that his survival required drastic action.
Using his pocketknife, he amputated his arm below the elbow and applied a tourniquet and administered first aid.
He then rigged anchors, fixed a rope and rappelled to the canyon floor.
He hiked downstream and was spotted about 3 p.m. by a Utah Public Safety Helicopter. The search for Ralston had begun the same morning, after authorities were notified he was four days overdue reporting for work.
Ralston was described by authorities as an avid outdoorsman in exceptional physical condition. They said he was known to have climbed 49 of Colorado’s major peaks.

© 2003 Associated Press
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#2 Postby Lindaloo » Fri May 02, 2003 10:14 am

What a horrible story Amanzi!! My heart goes out to him and what he had to endure just to survive!! :cry:
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ColdFront77

#3 Postby ColdFront77 » Fri May 02, 2003 2:36 pm

Wow what a story that is! :o
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#4 Postby Garnetcat5 » Fri May 02, 2003 2:59 pm

Sounds like a Stephan King novel.....*shiver*
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#5 Postby mf_dolphin » Fri May 02, 2003 3:31 pm

Not my idea of fun that's for sure.... It's remarkable that he didn't go into shock and bleed to death to boot!
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#6 Postby streetsoldier » Sat May 03, 2003 1:58 am

This is one reason why I never took the field without at least a 7", .250 thick sheath knife...God, the idea that this man made do with a Victorinox... :o
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ColdFront77

#7 Postby ColdFront77 » Sat May 03, 2003 2:00 am

Right, Marshall... cutting off your own limb, I don't even want to think anymore about it.
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#8 Postby azsnowman » Sat May 03, 2003 8:59 am

There was a gentleman a few years back that did the same thing, only to his leg. He was a logger, working WAY out in the boonies, fell a tree, which in turn rolled the opposite direction of the cut, fell on his leg, he cut his leg off with a pocket knife, got in his pickup and drove himself to the logging camp!

One never knows what we are capable of until we are put into a situation that requires quick, rational thinking!

Dennis
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#9 Postby Amanzi » Sat May 03, 2003 9:59 am

Rightly said Dennis. This man's story just goes to show what the human is capable of doing when your survival is threatened.
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ColdFront77

#10 Postby ColdFront77 » Sat May 03, 2003 4:05 pm

I suppose that could be the case, but if you are by no means want to cut one of your own limbs off no matter what the situation, then it wouldn't be done.

There can be better means of getting yourself help, no matter alone or with at least one other person.
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#11 Postby azsnowman » Sat May 03, 2003 6:36 pm

As it's been said, we only use 10% of our brain, we have NO IDEA what we can truly accomplish when we put our minds to it. Myself, I say I couldn't cut off my own leg, arm but then again, I've never been put into a situation that I had to make a choice like that, I think if push came to shove, I could do it, just make damn sure there is enough pain meds and beer waiting for me "LOL!"

Dennis
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ColdFront77

#12 Postby ColdFront77 » Sat May 03, 2003 8:07 pm

Still find it hard to believe. There have to be alternatives to amputated your own limbs. :o
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#13 Postby streetsoldier » Sat May 03, 2003 9:32 pm

I dunno...if I woke up one morning to see Chelsea Clinton nestled on my arm, I'd cut it off so as not to awaken her... :o
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#14 Postby chadtm80 » Sat May 03, 2003 9:37 pm

ROFLMAO!!!! SS
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#15 Postby mf_dolphin » Sat May 03, 2003 10:01 pm

We call that Coyote Ugly :-)
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#16 Postby pojo » Sun May 04, 2003 11:52 am

Climber Who Cut Off Arm to Have Surgery

May 4, 11:37 AM (ET)

By ANGIE WAGNER


GREEN RIVER, Utah (AP) - Aron Ralston, a climber who cut off his arm to free himself from a huge boulder, is improving and will have surgery Monday to close his wound.

Surgeons may have to shorten the bone so Ralston will be able to wear a prosthetic arm, hospital officials said. He was hospitalized in fair condition after his six-day ordeal.

Ralston, an avid outdoorsman and expert climber from Aspen, Colo., was on a day hike April 26 when a boulder shifted onto his arm. Out of water and unable to move the boulder after days of trying, Ralston used a pocketknife to cut off his arm.

His family issued a statement thanking the people who rescued Ralston after he was able to get free on Thursday.


Sgt. Mitch Vetere, who found Ralston after the climber freed himself, had never seen anything it.

A man, bloody from head to toe, in the bottom of a canyon, streaks of red staining his bare legs. Part of his arm was gone.

Vetere wasn't sure what had happened. "I cut it off with my pocketknife," Ralston told him, matter of factly.

Then he told his story.

Saturday, April 26, started as a routine day of climbing for Ralston, an avid outdoorsman and expert climber. He planned to spend the day riding his mountain bike and climbing the red rocks and sandstone just outside the Canyonlands National Park in southeastern Utah - 350,000 acres of mostly wilderness with areas of buttes, mesas and intricate canyons.

He had climbed alone before plenty of times. He had scaled 49 of Colorado's 14,000-foot peaks in the winter and this outing was a warm-up for an ascent of Alaska's Mount McKinley.

Ralston, 27, of Aspen, Colo., parked his pickup truck in a parking lot, took off on his mountain bike for 15 miles, then tied it to a juniper tree.

He planned to canyoneer down remote Blue John Canyon and end up where he parked his truck, then go back for the bike. Canyoneering is where a climber uses rock-climbing gear to negotiate narrow canyons and moves in a horizontal direction rather than vertical.

Ralston was maneuvering around a narrow slot canyon just 3 feet wide when he put his right hand on the side of a boulder, and it shifted, pinning his hand.

He was trapped.

Ralston tried ropes, anchors, anything to move the boulder, but it wouldn't budge.

Temperatures dipped into the 30s at night, and still Ralston worked to free himself.

By Tuesday, his water ran out.

No climbers had come by.

When Ralston didn't show up for his job at the Ute Mountaineer store in Aspen, friends called authorities.

Vetere, a patrol sergeant with the Emery County Sheriff's Office in Green River, got the call Thursday morning. A climber was several days overdue. His truck had been found, but no one had seen Ralston.

Terry Mercer, a helicopter pilot with the Utah Highway Patrol in Salt Lake City, met Vetere and another deputy about 1 p.m. Thursday at Horseshoe Canyon, where Ralston's truck was parked.

After reading notes and looking at Ralston's equipment in his truck, Mercer and Vetere knew Ralston was an experienced climber. They figured he might have headed north up the trail, since it gets deeper and sharper the farther north it extends.

Hikers and climbers who parked in the same lot as Ralston said they had gone south and didn't see Ralston.

Mercer flew for about two hours. Nothing.

As he was about to land, he, Vetere and the other deputy looked down into the canyon and saw two people waving. They were tourists from Holland who had encountered Ralston as he tried to find help.

Ralston was covered in blood. Vetere was shocked at the sight - dry and fresh blood coating his body. His red legs matched the red rocks, Vetere thought.

Mercer radioed back to the command center in the parking lot: "He looks OK. He's walking. He looks pretty strong."

After Ralston was helped into the helicopter, Mercer peeked back at him. Ralston's right arm was in a makeshift sling made from a camelback used to carry water.

"I was wondering what in the world happened," Mercer said.

Ralston leaned his head back in the helicopter and sipped on some water. Vetere kept him talking, so he wouldn't lose consciousness.

After he ran out of water and no one had come for him, Ralston said he knew he would have to cut off his arm to save himself. He used his pocketknife he had stuffed into his shorts pocket. His rescuers didn't ask to see it.

He then rappelled down some 60-75 feet to the canyon floor and walked 4 to 5 miles before he saw the tourists from Holland.

Vetere and Mercer almost didn't believe it.

Ralston was within a mile of his pickup truck. He almost didn't even need to be rescued.

Twelve minutes later, the helicopter arrived at Allen Memorial Hospital in Moab, Utah. Ralston walked into the emergency room without help, then pointed out on a map where he had been stuck.

Mercer and two other deputies went back into the canyon, hoping they could retrieve Ralston's hand and that it could be reattached.

Ralston had called the boulder a 200-pound rock, but Mercer could easily see it was at least 800 pounds.

"We could see his rope that he had left hanging that he had rappelled down on," Mercer said.

"It was very sobering because we saw the ropes he had rigged up to try and get a pulley action. To think he had sat there for five days working at getting his hand loose and finally deciding he had to do something to save himself," he said.

The rock - covered in Ralston's blood - wouldn't move. Marks on the canyon wall indicated the rock had fallen 2 or 3 feet.

Ralston was transferred to St. Mary's Hospital in Grand Junction, Colo., where he was in fair condition on Saturday.

Friends say Ralston is known for living on the edge.

"To be honest, sometimes we get pretty scared with some of the things he's doing," said Brion After, manager of the store where Ralston works.

His rescuers are still amazed at Ralston's will to live. They say he likely wouldn't have been found by a helicopter because of his position on the canyon wall.

"I've never seen anybody that had this much desire and this much tenacity to stay with it and stay alive," Mercer said.

Mercer and Vetere are used to seeing disoriented climbers who lose their way or just give up while waiting for help.

Aron Ralston was different, they say.

He saved himself.
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