NATIONAL PARK SERVICE
MOOSE, WY — Grand Teton National Park, Teton County Search and Rescue and Jackson Hole Mountain Resort coordinated a successful rescue of a backcountry skier on May 29.
At approximately 10:45 a.m. Teton County Dispatch received an
emergency call regarding an individual that was injured after a substantial
fall on the west side of Cody Peak, south of the Jackson Hole Mountain
Resort. Four individuals were hiking from the top of the tram at the
Resort to backcountry ski when one of the individuals slipped on firm snow and
ice, falling approximately 1,000 feet. One of the individuals
called 911, and two members of the party plus two other individuals from a
separate party, who happened to be emergency medical technicians, descended to
the injured member of the group.
Teton County Search and Rescue initiated a rescue response,
including their helicopter, and notified Grand Teton National Park for
assistance. Members of the mountain patrol staff from the Jackson Hole
Mountain Resort also assisted by skiing to the location of the
injured skier.
Though the accident site was determined to be inside the park
boundaries once rescuers located the scene, park and county search and rescue
leaders determined that Teton County would maintain command in the interest of
efficiency. The county helicopter dropped off one rescuer on a nearby ridge who
then skied to the patient and determined that a short-haul extraction was
appropriate.
The park short-haul team responded and the injured individual,
24-year-old Stephen Sherk from Jackson, Wyoming, was transported via short haul
and driven by county ambulance to St. John’s Medical Center in Jackson.
The National Park Service, Teton County and Jackson Hole Mountain
Resort work and train collaboratively to respond to emergency situations. It is
through this professional partnership that successful outcomes such as this
rescue are possible.
Short-haul is a rescue technique where an individual or gear
is suspended below the helicopter on a 150 to 250 foot rope. This method allows
a rescuer more direct access to an injured party, and it is often used in the
Teton Range where conditions make it difficult to land a helicopter in the steep
and rocky terrain.