WATCH: Rescuer Drops From Helicopter To Help Injured Hiker On Crestone Needle
CUSTER COUNTY, Colo. (CBS4) -- When a climber was injured on Crestone Needle in the Sangre de Cristo mountains, rescue technicians from the Colorado Hoist Rescue Team, and a Colorado National Guard helicopter from Buckley Air Force Base, came to the rescue. But officials say no one should ever count on that.
Hoist Rescue From Crestone NeedleOn Saturday (9/19/2020) the Colorado Hoist Rescue Team (CHRT) was activated for a mission to assist Custer County SAR (CCSAR) in the rescue of an injured climber. The team sent a pair of Rescue Technicians from Alpine Rescue Team and a Colorado National Guard (COARNG) UH-60 and its crew from the Army Aviation Support Facility (AASF) at Buckley Air Force Base, to a location high on the Crestone Needle's Ellingwood Arete. Custer County SAR managed the operation, and had field teams ready to go if conditions did not allow hoists of the two climbers. Fortunately, favorable conditions enabled the flight crew and hoist operator to deliver the rescue tech on target. Please know that while one rescuer rides the hoist, there is a team of more than 20 others from the organizations mentioned above, along with the Colorado Search and Rescue Association - CSAR, working together to make the rescue possible. The use of helicopters in search and rescue is dangerous, and Colorado's high elevations and warm summertime temperatures only compounds the dangers for the aviators and rescue crews. The use of a helicopter is limited to rescue those whose injuries are life-, limb-, or eyesight-threatening, or when conditions put ground-rescuers at significant peril. The arrival of a helicopter in a search and rescue setting should never be considered an expectation. It is an exception.
Posted by Alpine Rescue Team on Thursday, October 1, 2020
"The use of helicopters in search and rescue is dangerous, and Colorado's high elevations and warm summertime temperatures only compounds the dangers for the aviators and rescue crews," officials with Alpine Rescue Team wrote on Facebook.
"Fortunately, favorable conditions enabled the flight crew and hoist operator to deliver the rescue tech on target," officials wrote.
In this case, the target was a tiny path, next to a stunning drop off.
"Thanks for coming," the climber tells the rescuer after he is clipped in and both are about to be hoisted up the helicopter.
"Please know that while one rescuer rides the hoist, there is a team of more than 20 others... along with the Colorado Search and Rescue Association - CSAR, working together to make the rescue possible," officials stated.
Officials said Custer County Search and Rescue managed the operation, and had field teams ready to go if conditions did not allow hoists of the two climbers.