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Hiking a Colorado Fourteener Becomes a Fight to Survive After a Catastrophic Fall
Published
2 years agoon
By
Robert King“], “filter”: { “nextExceptions”: “img, blockquote, div”, “nextContainsExceptions”: “img, blockquote”} }”>
Leon Sparks, a 44-year-old sales representative in Mississippi, spends one week each summer hiking Colorado’s 14,000-foot peaks. On Sunday, July 31, 2022, Sparks attempted to climb three peaks in one day in the San Juan Range: El Diente Peak, Mount Wilson, and Wilson Peak. Unfortunately for Sparks, he fell, shattered his ankle, and had to be rescued on the side of El Diente Peak.
My plan was to camp at Navajo Lake on Saturday night, which would give me access to Mount Wilson, Wilson Peak, and El Diente Peak. If everything worked out perfectly, I could have gotten all three in one day, made it back to the lake, and camped for one more night.
I had a rainy five-mile trek into the lake, and the only thing I had packed were my hiking clothes. Everything was soaking wet and I almost froze, but I set up my camp by about 10 P.M. On Sunday morning, I wanted to start at 4:30 A.M., but I didn’t get going until 6 A.M. So I was late, and I was rushing.
The route up El Diente involves Class Three or Class Four scrambling. I could tell the rocks were a little loose in areas, so I was being really careful with my holds. I reached an altitude of 14,100 feet at about 9:30 A.M.. And that is where I chose to make a left turn instead of going right. Looking back at 14ers.com, which is where I get my routes, I can see I followed the correct path all the way to that point. I went left because the route looked easier, but it was a mistake.
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I started going up the side of the mountain, probably getting into some easy Class Five terrain. I had to get over a bulging rock, and that meant pushing up on my legs and pulling up with my arms, and then grabbing another rock with my left hand. When I pushed, my left foot slipped off its hold, and then the rock broke out from under my left hand. I started sliding. I was thinking, “Oh my god. Did this really just happen?”
I grabbed onto whatever I could, clawing at the mountain the whole way down, but nothing caught. All of a sudden, there was a rock beneath me sticking out from the mountain. It stopped my legs, and I was able to grab onto it right as I felt myself about to flip backward, which would have been deadly. Then I came to a standing position next to this rock.
After the fall, I started assessing my body. My adrenaline was pumping. And I was like, “Okay, I’ve got some cuts on my arm. I’ve got a pretty substantial gash right below my knee—nothing that I can’t fix up in order to keep going.” Then I tried to turn around to take my pack off, and when I turned, my right foot just stayed where it was. That’s when I knew I had really screwed up.
I took my pack off and set it on the rock that had saved me. I pulled my Garmin InReach off of my belt. When I grabbed the Garmin, my pack went tumbling—and I reached out to grab the pack, but then I dropped the Garmin too. I watched it go down and land in a gully about 30 or 40 feet below. I thought, “I gotta get my Garmin,” not realizing I had cell service.
I shimmied down the side of the mountain, trying to brace my broken ankle. I reached the gully, and it was full of sand. I scooted right over the top of the Garmin and grabbed it. My next step was going to be to retrieve my pack, but as I looked around the curve of the gully, I knew there was no way to get it. I did not want to hit the SOS button on my Garmin. That is the last thing I ever thought I would have to do out in those mountains. But I knew I had to do it. Before hitting the button, I looked down at my phone and saw I had service. I immediately called my wife, Jennifer.“I just want you to know that I am okay,” I told her. “I’ve got a broken ankle or a broken leg, and I’m about to hit this SOS button on the Garmin.” I gave her the heads up because she and my dad are emergency contacts, so hitting the InReach was about to notify them.
You never think you’re going to need a GPS tracker like the Garmin InReach—until you do. I’m so glad I had it.
When I hit the SOS button, Garmin immediately texted me on my cell. They followed up with a phone call, and we talked—then the responder called the Dolores County search and rescue, and they talked to team captain Keith Keesling. He called to tell me that his team was devising a rescue plan. He was calm. I later learned later that every time Keesling got off the phone with me, he called my wife to keep her in the loop. It took a lot of anxiety and stress off her.
RELATED: How to be Prepared for Safety on the Trail
After a few phone calls, Keith told me he’d gotten approval from the state to send a helicopter, which was 45 minutes away. In the meantime, they sent a local helicopter, from San Miguel County search and rescue. That chopper came by, got a look at my location, and relayed that info to the rescue team. Then the other helicopter, the Mesa Verde Helitack, came 30 minutes later.
During this time, the sun ducking behind the clouds. I shivered like crazy every time the sun went away. All I had on was a light long-sleeve fishing shirt, running shorts, knee-high compression socks, and my trail shoes. I was freezing. And whenever I shivered, my leg felt like it was on fire. I watched the weather closely, because I knew that if it started raining, they were going to have to call the rescue mission off, and I’d be stuck on the mountain with no extra clothes.
When the Mesa Verde Helitack got there, the rescue began. A rescuer named Pepé flew to me hanging on a rope that was probably about 300 feet long, dangling from the helicopter. They dropped him off right next to me, and he carried a giant green bag full of gear. He gave me his personal jacket to wear. Pepé put me in a sling that dangled underneath the helicopter. But then he decided he wanted to stabilize my leg better, so he placed me on what appeared to be an inflatable mattress that hooks to the rope dangling from the helicopter. Then he called the helicopter to come back, he hooked me up to it, and it took off with me dangling underneath. Pepé stayed behind; the helicopter was going to go back for him after getting me down.
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