Snowmobiler Rescued

TCSAR participated in rescuing and transporting an injured snowmobiler from the Togwotee pass area today (1/2/12).

TCSAR received several fragmented 911 calls but were unable to locate or confirm that an incident was in progress until a notification made by a SPOT personal locator sent a text message to the dispatch center.  The information from the SPOT provided an accurate location near Togwotee pass and information on the injured snowmobiler.

Members of TCSAR flew in the contracted helicopter to the area and found Togwotee guides on scene with the man, who was injured when his machine flipped while trying to climb a steep incline.  The guides had properly insulated the man from the cold ground and covered him in blankets.  The SAR members packaged the man into the helicopter and provided him with pain medications before transporting him back to the the TCSAR base and transferring him to a Jackson Hole Fire/EMS ambulance crew.  

This marks the first rescue of 2012 for the members of TCSAR.

TCSAR aids 3 in Darby Canyon Cave

TCSAR received a call at 9:45 on Sunday, October 16th from the wife of one of the subjects.  The weather was partly cloudy in the morning but deteriorated throughout the day with rain, sleet, hail and snow.  6-10 inches of snow was reported at the scene.  

TCSAR arrived at Darby Canyon at mid-day and began coordinating with Driggs SAR who was already on scene.  After initially checking the wind and ice cave entrances, it was decided to assemble teams to do a through trip of the cave.  

Both teams entered the cave in the early evening.  Around 9:30pm one team found notes left from the missing party inside the cave, dated at 2pm.  The note read that the party was headed toward the ice cave entrance and needed help.  

At this point, another team was assembled to head back into the wind cave to wait for one hour to see if the missing subjects arrived.  Th subjects were found and all teams exited the wind cave by 1:45am.  All volunteers and the subjects arrived at incident command by 4am.  

This was a huge effort put forward by the 40+TCSAR and Driggs team members, over 9 members of the public.  The operation time lasted 19.5 hours.  

For more information please contact Teton County Sheriff’s Department.  

www.tetoncountysar.org

Missing skiers found after 6 days of searching

This press release was originally report at http://gtnpnews.blogspot.com

April 24, 2011

For Immediate Release

On the evening of Saturday, April 23, after a long day of searching an avalanche debris field in Garnet Canyon Meadows, a Grand Teton National Park ranger picked up two discernible beacon signals deep in the snowpack. Due to the late hour—coupled with the need to evacuate all search teams from the Teton canyon and cease helicopter operations before day’s end—a handful of rescuers were not able to dig deep enough to locate the source of the signals. Early Sunday morning, a core group of park rangers flew back into Garnet Canyon to resume digging. After two hours, they reached Walker Pannell Kuhl and Gregory Seftick, buried under 13 feet of snow near a large boulder in the avalanche path.
Over 35 rescue personnel and four canine teams methodically searched the large avalanche field in Garnet Canyon for more than ten hours on Saturday. With the help of good weather, rescuers hoped to find any clue as to the fate of Kuhl and Seftick. At 7 p.m. with just two teams left to airlift from the canyon, Ranger Nick Armitage made one final sweep with his avalanche transceiver over an area that had been probed by rescuers earlier in the day. After Armitage picked up first one beacon signal, and then another, five additional rescuers joined in digging through the dense snowpack to reach the source. Although five feet of snow was cleared away, rescuers were not able to reach the beacon before the last helicopter flight needed to be made. Upon removing the snow, however, rescuers also made a positive probe hit. It should be noted that avalanche probe poles are generally 10 feet long and the beacon was deeper than their initial reach.
On Sunday morning, helicopter pilot Nicole Ludwig—flying a Teton County Search and Rescue contract helicopter out of Hillsboro, Oregon—airlifted six park rangers back into the Garnet Canyon Meadows to resume digging toward the two beacons. Rangers continued to excavate through another ten feet of snow before they reached Walker and Greg. Rangers then prepared them for a helicopter flight to the valley floor where a Teton County coroner met the ship and took Greg and Walker’s bodies to a local mortuary.
It appears that Walker and Greg were buried by a large avalanche that shed off the north face of Nez Perce Peak sometime Saturday night, April 16, while they were in their tent, located near a large boulder between the Platforms and the Meadows of Garnet Canyon. Walker and Greg carried avalanche beacons and other appropriate gear with them on their trek into the Teton Range, and their beacons were transmitting when the avalanche enveloped their campsite. 
The concentrated search for Kuhl and Seftick lasted six days, due in part to stormy weather, new snowfall and ongoing concerns about avalanche danger for rescue teams. Search operations involved park rangers and staff, as well as numerous Jackson Hole community rescue personnel. Grand Teton National Park appreciates the cooperation and dedication of the organizations and companies who assisted during the past several days. Those groups include trained rescue personnel, volunteers and support staff from Teton County Search and Rescue, Teton Interagency Fire personnel, Bridger-Teton National Forest and Bridger-Teton National Forest Avalanche Center staff, a Yellowstone National Park employee, Jackson Hole Mountain Resort ski patrol, Wyoming K9 Search and Rescue teams, and Grand Targhee Resort ski patrol and canine teams, as well as experienced professional mountaineers from Jackson Hole Mountain Guides and Exum Mountain Guides.
The Seftick and Kuhl families extend their heartfelt thanks to all rescuers for their work in helping to locate their sons and brothers.