|
发表于 2009-9-24 21:44:31
|
显示全部楼层
晃晃
[quote]weiqi
我觉得那个小狮子头部分已属于岩石攀登,并不适合大部分普通HIKER, 其高度,风景和旁边的RIDGE上相差无几. 一定要爬的话, 要有熟悉人的带路, 速度要慢, 确保双手,双脚所依靠的每一块岩石和绳缆都是牢固的. 这是一个绝不容许犯错误的地方. :shock:
如果真这么可怕我就不登顶了, 主要是锻炼身体去了.登顶对我来说不那么重要.[/quote]
感谢你带头这样说.
West Lion Incidents
Many incidents occur on the popular route leading to the West Lion
Injury due to a fall on the route:
http://alpineclub-edm.org/accidents/accident.asp?id=844
Description: Background: The mountains of the Pacific Northwest have received record snowfalls during the previous winter months. Successive storm fronts deposited a deep snowpack in the mountains and delayed the onset of the Spring-Summer hiking season. Now clear summer weather has finally arrived many hikers have taken to the mountain trails - only to find them buried under feet of hard, icy snow. Within the last three weeks the Lower Mainland region of B.C. has experience four incidents of hikers, all ill equipped for the conditions, taking uncontrolled slides on the steep, slippery slopes. On one of these incidents a woman struck a tree and, after being rescued, died a few hours later in hospital. At 6 pm on Sunday August 1st 1999 Lions Bay SAR received a call from the Squamish RCM Police. A cell phone call had been received from somewhere in the mountains above Lions Bay of an injured female hiker. The report, in extremely broken English, appeared to indicate the hiker had either a broken leg or had undetermined injuries to her chest. The Lions Bay SAR team was immediately activated, followed by calls for two helicopters and mutual aid from the neighbouring North Shore Rescue Team. As the first two hasty teams prepared to be flown into the general search region attempts were made to communicate with the injured party, apparently a member of a group of four hikers. Poor cell phone reception in the mountain region, combined with what appeared to be very scant knowledge of English, made it impossible to immediately determine either the party's location or the nature of the subject's injuries. The first team to fly over the route of the hiking trail to the West Lion peak, spotted the group of hikers, high on a steep snow slope at the base of a ridge leading to the West Lion. As the first team landed on the ridge a second team was prepared with more ropes, stretchers and first aid equipment. At about the same time as the first team reached the subject the backup team from the North Shore Rescue, including a life-support paramedic, landed the second helicopter on the ridge. An initial assessment of the female subject indicated that she had struck a tree with her chest, which stopped an uncontrolled 40m slide. She had experienced some difficulty in breathing but now seemed to have recovered somewhat. It was decided that, given the limited remaining daylight, it would be quicker to have her, and her one female and two male friends, walk up to the waiting helicopters, with the aid of a fixed rope. Once a fixed rope was prepared the subjects were placed in harness's and walked, accompanied, up the slope, attached by prussik loops to the fixed line. As soon as the injured female reached the ridgeline she was examined again by the paramedics and immediately flown to Lions Gate Hospital for treatment. As the sun dropped to the horizon of the western mountains the teams hurried to get all the subjects up to the waiting helicopters. In the last few minutes of daylight the remaining subjects, and then the SAR team members, were all quickly transported down to the Lions Bay SAR Base. Next morning reports from the hospital indicated that the female subject had suffered five fractured ribs and was being kept under close observation, to minimize the risk of any further complications.
......
http://www.clubtread.com/sforum/ ... ;amp;TOPIC_ID=18451 |
|