[pct-l] Time to share.........Ian Sarmento.......lost in the snow.

Andrea Dinsmore andrea at dinsmoreshikerhaven.com
Tue Jan 21 17:01:18 CST 2014


2 years ago we almost lost our last NOBO hiker. Please be safe.

Here is "I'm Fine's" Story in his own words.

October 19th, I was hiking in the rain, when I passed Bouncer and Storytime
mid day who were waiting out the weather in their tents. After a few hours
of hiking, rain turned to sleet, and eventually to snow. There was already
some snow on the ground to begin with. I crossed Red Pass (6500 ft), and
was soaked to the bone and freezing, so after descending to a small patch
of trees at roughly 5500 ft, it started to get dark and I decided to setup
camp. When I awoke in the morning, the snow was already knee to mid thigh
deep, with some waist high drifts, and it was still coming down. I packed
up and decided to make a move for lower elevation, soon losing the trail. I
cut downhill to my left, the side of the ridge covered with nearly waist
deep snow, aiming for a creek with the intention of following running water
to lower elevation and hopefully eventually exiting the wilderness. After
following the creek for maybe an hour or so, I came to another patch of
trees and noticed a stump that had been saw-cut. I continued alongside the
creek until I came to 3 small logs laying across the creek with saw-cut
ends, and a noticeable indent (trail) in the snow on the other side. I
crossed the logs, and followed the indent the best I could, eventually
leading to a forested area, with the trail being much easier to follow.
This led to a very nice man made bridge, and the trail through the forested
area had less than knee deep snow for the most part. I came to a side trail
reading "trail abandoned, use new side trail .25 mile north of Sitkum Creek
on PCT". I continued to follow the trail until I reached that side trail,
with a sign reading "White Chuck Road and trail washed out". Fuck. I
continued north on the PCT until I reached a sign reading "White Chuck
Road, and Kennedy Hot Springs". Scratched into the sign were some notes
from other hikers including "Both Destroyed!!!" and "Not an exit!!!". FUCK.
I continued on the PCT hoping to cross Fire Creek Pass, and camp by Milk
Creek, hoping that the Milk Creek Trail would offer an exit. By nightfall I
lost the trail just north of where it crosses Glacier Creek (not instead),
and dug in next to a boulder, setup camp, and hoped to find the trail in
the morning. When I woke up a fresh 3-4 inches of snow had fallen. I
continued to walk
straight until I got on top of the ridge line. When I crested the ridge I
saw no sign of trail. The ridge dropped steeply down in front of me, to my
left was a steep treacherous pass, complete with shear cliffs and glaciers,
and to my right the ridge gradually descended until there were trees on it.
I couldn't cross the pass, I didn't want to slide down into the canyon to
my front (which eventually ended up happening anyway), I didn't want to
back track, so I trucked down the ridge to my right hoping to find sign of
the trail once I got into the trees, cut off branches, bark, anything.
Eventually the ridge grew steeper and steeper until I started sliding out
in 20ish foot sections, stopping myself on trees, until I reached a small 5
or 6 foot cliff. I lowered down that holding onto small trees and branches.
Eventually the path I chose became nearly vertical offering me no other
options than to continue forward. I reached a 15-20 foot cliff, the path
behind too steep to back track, so I maneuvered horizontally holding onto
trees until I found a smaller section of cliff about 9 feet high. I dropped
my back pack and trekking poles down first, then pissed on my hands to warm
them up enough to gain enough grip strength to lower
myself down holding onto exposed roots or rock. When I got to my back pack,
which had rolled about twenty feet in the snow I noticed that my camera had
fallen out of my hip belt pocket. I dug all around in the snow, went
downhill, back uphill, nothing. I had lost the only thing making me
feel somewhat connected to the outside world/people. Lost my video diaries
of this whole misadventure. Felt more alone. I continued forward until the
ground got a lot flatter and stumbled through a patch of small trees all
bent over under the weight of the snow from knee to chest height. I
reached one more small cliff and dropped down to the scree slopes of the
canyon below and started following the creek at the bottom downstream until
after about a quarter mile it dropped off steeply into a section of canyon
with 20 foot vertical walls. I back tracked until I reached
another waterfall. Each side of the canyon was too steep to ascend, so on
the floor of the canyon between two branches of the creek, I stomped down
and scooped out as much snow as I could on the flattest spot I could find
and set up my tent. And I waited. And waited. And waited... And starved.
And froze. And waited. On day 2 for some reason I had a premonition that
after nine nights in my tent I would be rescued. I spent those
nine nights rationing food at 300-500 calories per day, the first couple
days were closer to six or seven hundred. The first five or six nights were
very cold, and during this period the snow would melt a little during the
day, then usually more snow would fall back to it's original level. After
that it warmed up enough to rain, and even
the nights held only slightly below freezing. After night nine, the snow
was mostly melted. During this period I spent all day either hoping,
thinking, going crazy with hunger pains, or sometimes extreme anxiety, or
laying down calmly escaped in a day dream. I would sometimes feel good in
my decision to wait for help, and other times I
contemplated trying anything I could to make an escape. I would drift back
and forth between feeling relatively calm and sedated, to helpless and
anxious. At times I was confident that I would survive, and other times I
was less hopeful. By the fifth or sixth day I began imagining airplane
sounds from the noise the creek was making, by the seventh or 8th day I
began imagining helicopter noises, and by day nine or ten I would
constantly hear both airplanes and helicopters so I wore earplugs for the
last two days to try to protect my sanity the best I could. After the ninth
night the snow had melted enough that I
should have made a break for it then, but I decided to wait the day out in
leu of my premonition, and if I hadn't been rescued I would go for it the
next day. This was my first full day with zero calorie intake. The day came
and went, and when I woke up the next morning I decided that if I were
going to die in the wilderness, I wasn't going
to die laying in a nylon coffin in that god forsaken canyon which I had
grown to detest.I packed up and headed for the waterfall upstream, and
carefully climbed hand over hand beside it, then followed the creek above
to a low spot in the small cliff above the steep canyon wall, the only
possible chance I had of climbing out. I crawled up the
small scree slope on my hands and knees, then grabbed onto rocks and roots
to climb up the canyon wall. I reached a shelf between the small canyon
wall I climbed up and a large canyon wall on the other side. I fought
through thick undergrowth and trees until I reached an exposed section and
climbed up a small knoll to view the surrounding area. I spotted my best
chance of getting up the canyon wall and back onto the ridge line that I
originally ended up on after glacier creek. Leading up to this small spot
was a steep scree slope, which I crossed very carefully, each ill placed
step sliding out. When I got to the point I would attempt to climb, I
started up, and grabbing onto the frigid rock face for dear life, made it
up. Thinking back I cringed a little at the thought of how narrowly I had
made it to where I was and what would have happened if I made a mistake. I
hiked back to the first spot I reached on the ridge and resurveyed the
surroundings. I hiked around the area for a couple hours, backtracking two
different times until i got back to the same spot, and eventually traced my
steps back to glacier creek, found the trail and where it crosses, and
followed it up to fire creek pass, which was still covered in snow about
eight to ten inches deep and
completely exposed, making navigating very difficult. The north side of the
pass still had deep snow drifts and I couldn't see the trail at all at some
points. I found my way until the trail became clearer, and I followed it as
it dropped in elevation, back into pine forest. It started raining lightly
and by nightfall I was pretty wet. I
camped on the trail north of milk creek. The next two passes between me and
Stehekin were all pretty much the same, difficult to maneuver, covered in
snow, and sometimes frightening. I made it to Stehekin on a Friday, my last
meal, if you can call it that, on Monday. Hiking
without any food, after already barely eating for 9 days previously, was
very difficult. Sometimes I could hardly keep moving when going uphill or
through the snow. Having to pick my feet up to step over logs or rocks felt
like I was lifting blocks of concrete. I ended up consuming massive amounts
of water in spite of hardly sweating. I weighed in about eighteen pounds
lighter when I got to Stehekin. I
was ecstatic to have found my way out and to eat again, but also extremely
sore all over and maybe a little disoriented by now. After deciding to
continue north and complete my hike (with a gps this time), my back pack
was unbearably heavy, as I carried a ton of extra food. Had to be at least
sixty pounds, the pack I carried into the Sierra being 55 pounds, and that
didn't feel nearly as heavy as this. The first twenty miles to rainy pass
wereall smooth sailing, then it started snowing, and by the time I reached
cutthroat pass, a fresh 3-5 inches had fallen. As I approached cutthroat
pass, the higher I climbed, the more snow was left over from the last
storm, although it was frozen to a hard shell and very slippery and
difficult to walk on. The north side of the pass was worse and where ever
there was a steep ridge, the trail was completely
snowed over, then frozen solid, making it nearly impossible, and completely
terrifying, to traverse. South of Harts pass the trail was treacherous as
well, and I had to traverse a section on one ridge on my knees, facing the
mountain, and stabbing my trekking poles a foot into the snow as to anchor
myself to the mountain. North of rock pass I slid out and went about 100
feet down the ridge until stopping
myself with by digging my elbows and trekking poles into the ice and snow,
then using my trekking pole as a break, slid down the rest of the way to
the next switchback. Several times it took everything I had to keep going.
The last day it never got above thirteen degrees, and my nose was bleeding
all morning from the cold dry air. By nightfall, before the sun had even
finished setting, my thermometer
maxed out at zero degrees. After the ice that had formed in my inflatable
sleeping pad the night before stabbed a hole through it, I set up a bed of
pine branches under my tent for extra warmth on the last night. I finished
my thru hike on November 11th.

Ian Sarmento (I'm Fine)



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