National Guard, Reserve Crews Search For Two Remaining
Climbers
Although discouraged with the discovery of the body of one
missing climber on Mount Hood Sunday, members of the Oregon Army
National Guard, Nevada Air National Guard and Air Force Reserve
continued the search Monday for two other lost climbers.
Rescue crews, joined by civilian volunteers, took advantage of
clearing weather after several days of snow, ice and winds hampered
earlier efforts, Capt. Christopher Bernard of the Air Force
Reserve's 304th Rescue Squadron, based in Portland, said
Monday.
The 304th Rescue Squadron was the first aircrew on the scene
December 11, after three climbers went missing after they set out
December 7 for what was to be a two-day climbing trip, Air Force
Staff Sgt. Nick Przybyciel, of the 446th Airlift Wing at McChord
Air Force Base, WA told American Forces Press Service.
Nine pararescue team members and three combat rescue officers
conducted ground surveillance through December 14 before pausing
operations during inclement weather as they geared up to launch the
air mission, Przybyciel said.
The squadron left one crewmember on the mountain to serve as a
spotter for a Nevada Air National Guard C-130 Hercules aircraft.
The aircraft is part of the only Air Force wing equipped with
"scathe view" technology that provides real-time imagery of ground
activity via electro-optical and infrared sensors mounted on
military aircraft, Przybyciel explained.
Meanwhile, three Oregon Army National Guard helicopter crews
joined the search December 15. Twelve flight crews and medics
aboard two UH-60 Black Hawks from the 1042nd Medical Company (Air
Ambulance), based in Salem, and a CH-47D Chinook from Detachment 1,
D Company, 113th Aviation Battalion, based in Pendleton, are
involved in the search.
Monday morning, a Nevada Air National Guard C-130 Hercules
aircraft from Reno headed to the summit to retrieve the body of
Kelly James, 48, found in a snow cave Sunday on Mount Hood's north
face.
Joe Wimpler, Mount Hood County sheriff, compared locating the
snow cave to finding "a needle in a haystack" and praised the
"excellent spot on the part of the air crews."
The search for James' companions, Brian Hall and Jerry Cooke,
has narrowed to "The Gullies," an avalanche-prone area with a sheer
2,500-foot drop. It's still too dangerous to put ground crews in
the area, Wimpler said, but search-and-rescue efforts are
continuing from the air.
Bernard noted that the aircrews involved in the operation are
combat veterans who have served in the mountains of Afghanistan.
"There's a wide set of skills coming together to support this
mission," he said.
Despite the lack of good news, officials expressed optimism that
the missing two climbers may still be alive. "There definitely is
hope," Bernard said.
Army Col. Dave Greenwood, Oregon's state aviation officer who
has been flying Black Hawk missions during the search, said the
military is uniquely qualified to carry out the mission. "When we
see something like this, we realize that we're the only ones with
our type of capabilities, so we are always ready to roll," he
said.
The Oregon Guard typically conducts about 20 search-and-rescue
missions a year, but few of this magnitude, he said.
Greenwood noted that since returning from Afghanistan in March,
the Oregon Guard helicopter crews spent 43 days this summer
fighting wildfires. "It just never stops," he said. "It's a lot of
missions for these guys."
(Aero-News thanks Donna Miles, American Forces Press Service
for her report.)