Teton County Search and Rescue Foundation

Hot off the Press: The 2025 Midyear Rescue Report

Jackson, Wyo. — Teton County Search & Rescue had one of its busiest winters ever, according to the organization’s 2025 Midyear Review and Rescue Report

Between December 1, 2024, and May 31, 2025, TCSAR reported 64 calls for service. That figure rivals nearly the entire number of calls for many years before 2021, when annual calls for service took a dramatic jump. In the past six months, February saw the most calls with 18, while January had 13. After a relatively quiet March and April, the team saw a spike in May with 13 calls for service.

Most of the calls this winter came from skiers and snowboarders, which alerted TCSAR 27 times. The majority of those calls, 18, were from skiers and snowboarders who entered the backcountry from a resort boundary gate. Many of these lift-served backcountry incidents were handled by local ski patrol, underscoring the critical partnership between TCSAR and our three local ski resorts.

A big theme for this winter had to do with stuck or stranded snowmobilers. Snowmachiners accounted for 17 rescue calls, with five rescues leading to all-night operations from TCSAR volunteers.

In the thick of rescue season, heading out into a storm at night starts to feel normal—but it is not. Whenever I can step back and get some perspective on the TCSAR Team, I am amazed that an ordinary group of community volunteers are able to come together, risk their lives, and go into the mountains to save people they’ve never met.
— Cody Lockhart, TCSAR Chief Advisor

The Rescue Report is published twice yearly by TCSAR Foundation, the nonprofit that supports TCSAR volunteers and provides backcountry safety education and outreach. The reports are intended to highlight the commitment and dedication of TCSAR volunteers, provide lessons learned from backcountry accidents, and drive awareness for improving backcountry safety.

The new Rescue Report includes the following:

  • Incident recaps from every call that came into TCSAR from December 1, 2024, to May 31, 2025.

  • A deeper look at the trend of overnight snowmobile rescues.

  • How backcountry users can use the satellite text-to-911 feature on Apple iPhones.

  • Graphs and stats that reveal backcountry accident trends and demographics. 

  • Backcountry safety education highlights from the last six months.

Rescue Reports are available for free, and can be found at participating businesses all over Jackson Hole. Digital versions are available for download at at the button below.

Latest Rescue Has TCSAR Helping Mountain Biker in Black Canyon

Jackson, Wyo. — At 11:35 a.m. on Wednesday, June 25, Teton County Search & Rescue received an alert regarding an injured mountain biker in Black Canyon. The biker, a local 27-year-old woman, was descending the trail when she clipped a tree and went over the handlebars. The crash caused injuries that prevented her from riding or walking out on her own.

TCSAR volunteers transport an injured mountain biker down the Black Canyon trail on June 25, 2025. Photo: TCSAR

Without cell service in the canyon, the woman’s companion pedaled back up the trail until she could make an emergency call, and then returned to the scene. A TCSAR volunteer who lives near Wilson responded directly and ran up the trail from the Old Pass Road trailhead. This volunteer was followed by other volunteers on foot and on bikes.

Once on scene, the volunteers assessed the woman’s condition and packaged her for transport in the wheeled litter. The team transported the patient in the litter for about three miles down to the Old Pass Road, where a family member drove her to higher medical care.

As a friendly reminder, here are some options to help backcountry users contact 911 when there is little to no cellular service:

  • BackcountrySOS is a free app that allows you to connect to dispatch with minimal cell service. A great option for those who live in the region.

  • New Apple iPhones have satellite text-to-911 capability, as long as you have a clear view of the sky and horizon.

  • Satellite communication devices, such as the Garmin inReach, can connect you to emergency services as well, and require a subscription.

It's Wheeled Litter Season in the Tetons: TCSAR Responds to Injured Trail Users

On Sunday, June 22, a 35-year-old local male was trail running by himself in Phillips Canyon when he went down with a knee injury. At 2:10 p.m., he placed a call to 911 after determining that he was unable to walk and would need help getting out of the backcountry. 

TCSAR volunteers transport an injured trail runner down Phillips Canyon on Sunday, June 22. Photo: TCSAR

Teton County Search & Rescue responded with a team of volunteers on foot. The volunteers accessed the canyon from the trailhead on Fish Creek Road, and found the patient 2 miles up the trail.

The team assessed his injuries, and packaged him for transport in the wheeled litter. The volunteers then brought him down the trail to a waiting ambulance, completing the mission in 2 hours, 50 minutes.

The rescue on June 22 was the third time in just more than a week that TCSAR has used the wheeled litter to bring injured trail users out of the Teton backcountry. Photo: TCSAR

This was TCSAR’s third wheeled litter rescue in about a week. On June 14, volunteers placed an injured female hiker in the wheeled litter for a 1.3-mile transport out of Teton Canyon. Then on June 19, the team had the wheeled litter in action again about 1.2 miles up Spring Creek, south of Alta, to help an injured dirt biker get out of the backcountry.