Mountain Biker uses BackcountrySOS to Alert TCSAR

At 12:25 p.m. on Tuesday, August 8, TCSAR volunteers were notified of an injured mountain biker on the Phillips Canyon trail. The patient, a local man in 60s, crashed on his mountain bike while crossing a log-bridge feature over a creek. The man fell off the side of the log and sustained severe injuries that prevented him from riding or walking out of the backcountry on his own. Without reliable cell phone service, the man used the BackcountrySOS app to alert Teton County Dispatch, which connected the notification to TCSAR volunteers.

TCSAR volunteers treat an injured mountain biker on the Phillips Canyon trail on August 8, 2023. Photo: TCSAR

The team responded on foot up Phillips Canyon from the trailhead at Fish Creek Road. They were equipped with medical supplies and the wheeled litter. The first volunteers reached the patient, located 1.7 miles up the trail, about one hour after the initial emergency notification. The volunteers then assessed the patient and packaged him for transport. After placing the man in the wheeled litter, they transported him down the trail and transferred him to a waiting ambulance on Fish Creek Road, completing the mission in about three hours.

BackcountrySOS is a free smartphone app that provides local dispatch with your exact location and nature of the emergency. Developed by the TCSAR Foundation, it works with minimal cell service where voice calls are not possible, and is available in 12 counties across the Intermountain West. Learn more at BackcountrySOS.com.

TCSAR volunteers transport an injured mountain biker down the trail in the wheeled litter. Photo: TCSAR

TCSAR Rescues Injured Hiker on Mount Glory

Jackson, Wyo. — Just before 2 p.m. on Sunday, July 16, TCSAR was notified regarding an injured male who was hiking on the Mount Glory bootpack. The 70-year-old man from Idaho Falls was about three-quarters up the trail when he injured his knee and could not continue. The man was hiking with a companion, and both were fit and had experience in the backcountry. However, hot temperatures on the south-facing slope, little shade, and the steep, loose trail made for challenging conditions.

The response from TCSAR called for several volunteers to hike up the trail from the Teton Pass summit. They carried water, energy drinks, and the wheeled litter. Volunteers located the patient about an hour after the emergency call and provided initial patient care. They then packaged him for transport down the mountain in the wheeled litter.

Due to the steep aspect, the team used a rope belay while other volunteers wheeled and carried the litter down to the parking lot at Hwy 22. Transport to the road took about 1 hour. The man declined an ambulance ride and instead decided to self-transport with his companion to higher medical care.

The effort involved 20 volunteers and took 3 hours, 57 minutes to complete.