LANCASTER, N.H. - A White Mountain hiker was
rescued Sunday evening, after surviving a perilous fall down the
slope of King Ravine.
On Sunday afternoon, hikers Douglas Soholt, age
25, of Colorado, and Nathaniel Blauss, age 28, of Hanson, Mass.,
were hiking the trails on the north side of Mt. Adams. At about 1:30
PM, after having successfully reached the summit of Mt. Adams, they
were beginning their descent on the Gulfside Trail located to the
north of the Mt. Adams summit. Soholt lost his footing, falling on
the icy alpine slab that is prevalent above treeline at this time of
year, and began to slide downward into King Ravine. Because of the
steep terrain, Soholt was not able to stop his fall and was last
seen by his companion sliding in the direction of the headwall of
King Ravine. Soholt had slid approximately 100 yards and was still
descending at a rapid rate when he disappeared from view.
A short while later, Soholt was able to call
911 with his cell phone. The fallen hiker gave his general position
and reported that he had suffered some superficial head injuries but
was otherwise unharmed. He was stranded near the treeline and could
not go up or down. This call alerted rescuers from the New Hampshire
Fish and Game Department's Advanced Search and Rescue Team, as well
as members of the Androscoggin Valley Search and Rescue (AVSAR),
that a high-angle, technical rescue would be required.
"Hasty" teams (rapid-response ground teams)
consisting of five Conservation Officers and four AVSAR members were
mobilized to respond to the Appalachia Parking Lot in Randolph to
ascend into King Ravine. Rescuers were to search the large headwall
area of the ravine both from the bottom and from the rim, where
Soholt was last seen. Because Soholt had survived his fall, it was
assumed that he had come to rest prior to pitching over the steepest
part of the ravine headwall. Ultimately, this would prove to be a
false assumption.
At about 8:30 PM, Conservation Officers Brad
Morse and Alex Lopashanski made visual contact with Soholt.
Miraculously, the hiker had fallen approximately two-thirds of the
way down the headwall of King Ravine, or roughly 1,500 feet down
extremely steep terrain, before he was able to stop. He was
initially spotted by the light of his headlamp. It took about an
hour for the rescuers to reach him.
Once in the hands of rescuers, Soholt was
lowered out of the steep terrain and was able to walk out under his
own power with the aid of rescuers. He reached the safety of the
trailhead at 12:45 a.m. Soholt's right eye had swollen shut, and he
had suffered other lacerations to his head, but was in remarkably
good condition considering the magnitude of his fall. He was
transported to Memorial Hospital in North Conway for treatment.
"Truthfully, I knew he was all right because he
had spoken to 911 after he had fallen. However, if all I had known
was where and how far he had fallen, I would have been preparing to
remove a critically injured or deceased person," said Lt. Douglas
Gralenski of Fish and Game. "He is one very fortunate person to
still be with us. If he had hit any rocks or trees of substance on
his descent, he would not have survived the fall."
The underlying lesson this incident carries for
other hikers is the importance of being prepared for the unexpected
in the outdoors. "They were not planning on hiking in technical
terrain and packed accordingly," said Gralenski. Soholt was wearing
"micro crampons" (similar to ice creepers) and carrying ski poles.
"It is still very much winter above treeline.
Although many trails above treeline are not viewed as technical
terrain, they are very icy. And, as this incident shows, unexpected
accidents can have dire consequences," Gralenski said. "Micro
crampons have their place in hiking, but it is not on the Gulfside
Trail or any other alpine trails near technical terrain. Traditional
crampons and an ice axe, not ski poles, should be standard equipment
in this area. If Soholt had these two pieces of gear, he most likely
would have been able to prevent his fall or self-arrest immediately
after the fall. Not having them could have easily been a fatal
mistake."
-N.H. Fish & Game