Fatality in Zion's Subway

Dave

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From the National Park Service:

A canyoneering fatality was located in Zion National Park on Wednesday, September 19, 2012. The name has not been released pending notification of relatives.

The victim and his partner, both unfamiliar to the route, had a permit to descend through the Subway on Tuesday, September 18, 2012. They were the last to descend the popular route. On the last rappel, the victim got his foot caught and could not free himself. His partner, who had already descended, was unable to help from below. The partner was caught by darkness and was unfamiliar with the exit route, and could not make it out of the Canyon until Wednesday morning to alert park rangers. Rangers received a call for assistance at approximately 11:45 a.m. and the park’s search and rescue team was deployed.

This incident serves as a good reminder about the importance of being prepared, knowing your limitations, and having the resources necessary to problem solve when something goes wrong. The Subway is Zion National Park’s most popular canyoneering route and requires several rope rappels. This is the first death in the Subway in recent history, but there are a number of rescues annually. Jock Whitworth, Superintendent of Zion National Park, expresses his deepest sympathies to the family. “The Subway is deceiving. It is a very popular trail, but very difficult- the 9-mile hike requires rappelling and ascending skills, extensive route finding experience, and swimming through several cold and deep pools. Unfortunately, its location inside the Wilderness also means that rescues are not always possible or timely enough. Sound decision making and problem solving are critical,” Whitworth said.

There is a Canyoneering safety video available on the park’s website at http://www.nps.gov/zion/photosmultimedia/canyoneeringsafety.htm

An investigation into the accident is ongoing. Ten people were employed in the search and recovery effort.
 
Hanging upside down for a long period of time will kill you. Stroke, blood clots, and even a heart attack... dont mess with blood circulation.
 
I didn't gather from the article that he was hanging upside down, it just said he 'caught his foot'. Did I miss something? Also hard to imagine how one could hang upside down on that last rap and not be able to correct. You can practically walk down all but the last 8 feet.
 
sounds like he was caught hanging up side down... crazy tragic.
 
Plus you have to know where to exit the canyon up the west side. I've hiked that alone in the dark while exhausted and it's a bear.
 
From another website not to be named. Take it for what it's worth:

"We were there today, saw the body, and passed SAR on their way in. On the final rappell a guy used logs over a waterfall rather than the bolts. SAR told us his autoblock got caught in his descender, and he was stuck. He apparently tried to cut himself out of his harness, inverting himself in the process and got his legs stuck (on leg loops?) His partner was on the ground but unable to help so they went for help but couldn't figure out how to exit the canyon in the looming darkness. The partner contacted SAR this morning, and body recovery is happening tomorrow via long-line. Lots of parties passed the body today (us included) - pretty somber.

Unclear if the guy died from being inverted in his harness overnight, harness-induced pathology, or exposure from a cascading icy waterfall. He had a helmet, and he didn't appear close enough to a wall for trauma to be a factor"
 
Incredibly sad. My condolences to his family and others involved.
 
Just terrible news. I wonder what rappel he was on? KSL said his partner "descended the 12' by 15' rappel first"? Is this the last rappel?
 
From what I understand they rappelled down the watercourse before the final rap, so basically at the top of the slot above the waterfall room. So incredibly sad.
 
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