Helicopter rescues climbers from near Mount Rainier summit

  • By LISA BAUMANN Associated Press
  • Friday, June 7, 2019 10:10am
  • News

By Lisa Baumann

The Associated Press

SEATTLE — A helicopter crew rescued four climbers from near the summit of Mount Rainier after they had been stranded on the Cascade Mountain peak in Washington for several days.

The climbers were suffering from exposure and were taken to Harborview Medical Center in Seattle, the National Park Service said in a statement.

Rescuers in the park’s helicopter took advantage Thursday morning of a break in bad weather that had stymied earlier attempts to reach the climbers. They were taken off the mountain in two groups and all were off the upper mountain just after 10 a.m. Thursday, officials said.

The climbers, all in their 30s, were being assessed in the emergency department Thursday afternoon, Harborview spokeswoman Susan Gregg said. All were awake and alert, and none had life-threatening injuries, she said.

The park had received a report Monday afternoon that the climbers needed help because wind blew away or destroyed a tent and some of their climbing equipment.

The climbers, who began their ascent last Friday, include Yevgeniy Krasnitskiy of Portland, Ore.; Vasily Aushev and Kostya “Constantine” Toporov of New York City; and Ruslan Khasbulatov of Jersey City, N.J. At least two of them have been described by family as experienced climbers, park officials said.

Krasnitskiy this spring climbed Mount Hood in Oregon and made an earlier unsuccessful attempt to climb Mount Rainier, roommate Scott Dupuis told The Seattle Times.

He described his roommate as organized, disciplined and humble.

“He respects the difficulty and challenges there [on Mount Rainier],” Dupuis said. “You can sense that.”

A park helicopter crew located the climbers Monday on the Liberty Ridge route at 13,500 feet.

After rescue attempts were thwarted by high winds Monday and Tuesday, park officials requested a U.S. Army Chinook helicopter and crew, which arrived Tuesday. Both crews were unable to make the rescue until Thursday because of high winds, rain and cloud cover, park officials said.

The climbers were found about a half-mile away from the site where they had been seen Tuesday, and in a place much less affected by wind and more accessible for rescuers. Park officials said the route between the two sites requires expert and technical climbing, and the climbers “contributed greatly” to their own rescue.

The Liberty Ridge route is described by officials as one of the more technical and dangerous routes on Mount Rainier. One person died and two other climbers were injured in a rock fall in that area last week.

The death of the climber was the first fatality on the route since 2014, when two guides and four climbers died after falling more than 3,000 feet, according to park officials.

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