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![]() Glacier Travel: Crevasse Rescue: Rescue Response
The depths of a great crevasse exhibit an awful beauty, both enticing and repellent. On a fine day, the walls are a sheen of soft blue ice in the filtered light from high above, and the cavern is cool and still as a church, or a tomb. It?s a place every climber should visit once in a lifetime?for crevasse rescue practice. But if there?s a second time, we hope it will be in the company of climbers who know the rescue techniques spelled out here.Here?s the scene: You?re the middle person on a three-person rope team traveling up a moderately angled glacier. The ropemate walking 50 feet in front of you suddenly disappears beneath the snow. What do you do?
Stop the fall immediately! Drop into self-arrest (facing away from the direction of pull) and hold the fall. Your other rope partner will do the same thing. Once the fall is stopped, the critical steps in crevasse rescue begin. To learn these procedures well requires training in the field, augmented with annual practice.The principal steps in a successful rescue, beginning the instant the fall is stopped, are the following:
As you work to save the fallen climber, observe these primary safety considerations:
© 1997. Excerpted with permission of the publisher from Mountaineering: The Freedom of the Hills, 6th ed, edited by Don Graydon; published by The Mountaineers, Seattle, WA.- Don Graydon Related Articles
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Backpack; Birds & Wildlife; DayHike; Ice Climbing; Mountain Bike; Mountaineering Basics; Snow Climbing; Winter Camping; Women;
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