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Sdiver
06-03-2016, 23:39
Glad to see everyone made it down okay.

Fort Carson special forces soldiers evacuated off Longs Peak; no injuries

A group of 10 special forces soldiers were helicoptered off Longs Peak in Rocky Mountain National Park on Friday after two of them fell ill with altitude sickness, according to Army officials.

Lt. Col. Sean Ryan, an Army spokesman, said the soldiers were on a routine training mission Thursday when the two soldiers became sick while climbing the 14,249-foot peak. No one was injured.

The soldiers, members of the 10th Special Forces Group that is stationed at Fort Carson in Colorado Springs, summited Longs Peak after two members of their group fell ill. Ryan said the group had to reach the summit in order to be flown off the mountain.

“It’s normal procedure for us,” Ryan said of high-altitude mountain climbing training.

The national park says rangers were summoned to help the soldiers late Thursday night. The soldiers were not planning to spend the night on the mountain, which is still under winter conditions.

The park service said one of the soldiers is a medic, who tended to his ill comrades.

“It’s important to recognize they were able to finish the climb this morning without assistance,” Mark Pita, the park’s chief ranger, told reporters at a news conference.

Pita said the soldiers were climbing a difficult section of Long Peak, known as Kiener’s Route, when they encountered problems.

Kyle Patterson, a spokeswoman for the national park, said none of the military personnel were ever missing or ever overdue, as initially reported. A television helicopter image of the soldiers showed them gathered on the Longs Peak’s summit.

Longs Peak can be a treacherous climb and the mountain has claimed some 60 lives since it became part of Rocky Mountain National Park in 1915, Patterson said.

http://www.denverpost.com/2016/06/03/search-crews-looking-for-10-overdue-military-personnel-on-longs-peak/

Team Sergeant
06-04-2016, 13:21
Not sure why it's front page news. We've had to pick up guys that have been shot, broken bones, hit by planes, drowned, boat sunk, demo range gone bad, HANO, plane crash, helo crash etc etc etc Big boy games are high risk, we know that before joining.

This is just another day at work for us. Must have been a very slow news day for foxnews.

Razor
06-04-2016, 13:45
Some important lessons here for everyone:

1) Acute Mountain Sickness (aka altitude sickness) can affect anyone at altitude, even the physically fit, and even those that live at high altitudes.

2) Don't ignore the symptoms in yourself or anyone in your group, or think you can simply 'push through'; things will only get worse. Recognize the problem, accept reality and head back downslope.

3) Acclimatization is important, but doesn't guarantee prevention. You need to work up to your objective altitude over time. This is especially important to all the 'lowland' tourists coming to CO looking to bag a bunch of 14ers in their week or so here. Nature has no pity, and physics no compassion--if you don't use your head, you will trigger other people to come try to help you, inconveniencing them at best, but maybe even putting them in danger as well.

Golf1echo
06-04-2016, 15:14
I've certainly had my butt kicked up at that elevation...