home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Path: sparky!uunet!gatech!destroyer!ncar!noao!amethyst!organpipe.uug.arizona.edu!fuji.hwr.arizona.edu!bobh
- From: bobh@fuji.hwr.arizona.edu (Bob Harrington)
- Newsgroups: rec.climbing
- Subject: Re: rappel accidents
- Message-ID: <1993Jan26.030439.25079@organpipe.uug.arizona.edu>
- Date: 26 Jan 93 03:04:39 GMT
- References: <1993Jan24.135831.63117@cc.usu.edu> <1993Jan24.213422.14936@sol.UVic.CA>
- Sender: Bob Harrington
- Distribution: usa
- Organization: University of Arizona -- Tucson, AZ
- Lines: 33
-
- In article <1993Jan24.213422.14936@sol.UVic.CA> randrew@teton.UVic.CA (Rex Andrew) writes:
- >I'm looking for a bit of (probably meaningless) trivia. Somewhere sometime
- >I read something to the effect that a lot of famous climbers have died in
- >rappel accidents (implying, I guess, that, having ascended a hard route, they
- >became inattentive on the descent, or that more generally, being veterens
- >of hard bold ascents, they became careless in something as straightforward (!)
- >as setting rappels anchors, etc.)
- >
- >Now clearly I don't want arguments on what a "famous climber" is! At the
- >time this was written, I suspect the author was referring to climbers a
- >few decades ago who honed their skills on local mountains and then went
- >off to do big things in the Alps, Himalayas, etc.
- >
- >I don't remember where I came across this assertion, and, notwithstanding
- >the annual list of misfortunes in Accidents in N.A.Mountaineering, I can
- >only think of Tom Patey as a possible example. Can anybody suggest others?
- >
-
- Jim Madsen, an accomplished Yosemite climber of the sixties, was killed
- when he rapped of the end of his rappell line on an El Cap rescue. He had
- rappelled down from the top of the Captain to check on the progress of an
- over due party on the Dihedral Wall. He was hanging at the end of the rope,
- with a knot in the rope jammed against his brake system, trying to communicate
- with the party on the route, when the knot got sucked through the brake, and
- he free fell to the deck. Ironically, the climbers on the route were just
- slow, and in no need of a rescue.
-
- >Rex
-
- Bob Harrington
- Indentured Research Assistant, Tenured Graduated Student
- Hydrology and Water Resources
- University of Arizona
-