Hypothermic hiker rescued from Little Haystack by helicopter

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Ear Drum

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Below is the FH N&G press release about the incident, which occurred on December 19. Then from their Facebook post I've added two photos of the helicopter in action. Good work by the SAR team members, flight crew, F&G officers, and hospital staff - they saved a life yesterday.

press release from: https://nhfishgame.com/2024/12/20/hiker-rescued-from-little-haystack-mountain

Hiker Rescued from Little Haystack Mountain​

December 20, 2024

Franconia, NH
– At 8:15 a.m. on Thursday, December 19, Conservation Officers were made aware of a hiker in distress just below the summit of Little Haystack on Franconia Ridge. The solo hiker had contacted NH 911 and reported that his limbs were frozen, he was hypothermic, and could no longer move through the several feet of snow. Temperatures were in the 20s with winds blowing consistently above 30 miles an hour. Coordinates placed the hiker about 1,000 feet off trail at 4,300 feet in elevation.

Conservation Officers and volunteers with Pemi Valley Search and Rescue Team responded to the trail and by 10:00 a.m. had started up the Falling Waters Trail. While most of New Hampshire saw some sun today, weather in Franconia Notch was cloudy with intermittent snow squalls. A call was made to the Army National Guard in hopes that an airlift could be performed if a favorable weather window presented itself. Unfortunately, when the Army National Guard arrived in Franconia Notch at around 10:45 a.m., the cloud cover only allowed for them to get within a quarter of a mile of the hiker before they had to turn back because of poor visibility. They were able to land at nearby Cannon Mountain Ski Area to wait for a safer opportunity.

It took over an hour to cover the 1,000 feet of bushwhacking from Falling Waters Trail to where the hiker was located, and by 1:00 p.m., the first ground rescuers reached the hiker. Vegetation was extremely thick and the terrain was steep. Snowshoes were a must once rescuers left the trail. At this point he was extremely hypothermic. He was placed in a Bothy Bag for shelter and given warm, dry clothing and warm fluids. The hiker stayed sheltered and was stabilized with rescuers while others with a rescue litter were making a trail to them. At around 3:00 p.m., the clouds lifted enough for the Army National Guard to return to the area. By 3:15 p.m., Guard had lowered a medic and hoisted the hiker into the helicopter. As soon as the hiker was in the helicopter, the cloud cover returned to the area. They made their way immediately to Littleton Regional Healthcare where they arrived before 3:30 p.m. This aerial rescue saved a multi-hour carry out through rugged terrain and is a testament as to how search and rescue works in New Hampshire with several different groups working together for a common goal.

The severely hypothermic hiker was identified as 28-year-old Patrick Bittman of Portland, Maine. It was learned that Bittman had departed sometime the previous evening so that he could watch the sunrise from Mount Lafayette. Once near the summit of Little Haystack, he encountered deep blowing snow and decided to come back down. He could not find the trail as he descended and ended up heading into the Dry Brook drainage when he eventually called for help.

Winter conditions have arrived in the White Mountains, and hikers are encouraged to be prepared for their trek to include packing the ten essential items: map, compass, warm clothing, extra food and water, headlamp, fire starter, first aid kit, whistle, rain/wind jackets and pants, and a knife. For additional information, please visit www.hikeSafe.com.

Photos from:

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Report says victim was placed in a Bothy bag. I’ve searched for one online and they seem available only in England. And the shipping was more than the cost of a 2 person bag.

Anyone know of a US source for a Bothy bag?
 
It's amazing how difficult it is in the winter to find where the Falling Waters trail comes out of the woods near the summit of Little Haystack. There must be dozens of incidences now where people have missed it and ended up off trail. In my minds eye, it's just basically right there below the summit, but it's obviously very tricky based on even very experienced people having issues over the years.
 
It's amazing how difficult it is in the winter to find where the Falling Waters trail comes out of the woods near the summit of Little Haystack. There must be dozens of incidences now where people have missed it and ended up off trail. In my minds eye, it's just basically right there below the summit, but it's obviously very tricky based on even very experienced people having issues over the years.
The same issue has happened countless times on the summit of Lafeyette. People miss the turn onto Greenleaf and keep right on going, end up on Garfield ridge or down in the ravine where that young girl Emily died.
 
It's amazing how difficult it is in the winter to find where the Falling Waters trail comes out of the woods near the summit of Little Haystack. There must be dozens of incidences now where people have missed it and ended up off trail. In my minds eye, it's just basically right there below the summit, but it's obviously very tricky based on even very experienced people having issues over the years.
Every time I go through there I stop to take a glance in that direction. The scrub and ground all does look amazingly uniform there and the "indent" to the trail doesn't stand out very well. I've only been there once in really bad conditions and I can totally see people struggling to locate it. A post with a reflector or something probably wouldn't be a horrible idea. (It's been a few years since I've been there so maybe new signage is there? I noticed a lot of new easel style signs this past Summer on some popular trails like Great Gulf warning of walking in alpine zone, etc.)
 
The Bothy Bag is reminiscent of the Gwynley Nest, something we old-timers learned about and used back in the early 80s. As I recall, it was developed by former AMC trip leaders Dick Bailey, who passed away a few years ago, and Anne Gwynne. It's basically a giant bivy bag that you could use to retain your warmth and dry state in a winter storm. I can't find anything about it online, but I can contact Anne to see if she has more details about the history of it and its similarity to the Bothy bag.
 
Is this what you are looking for? Other similar products available but this one seems like one of the better ones. https://www.amazon.com/Terra-Nova-E...9002474&hvtargid=pla-2281435177818&th=1&psc=1

The red Bothy Bag seen on the ground from the Blackhawk in the FB photos (thanks, Ear Drum) is probably one that was made for PVSART (two of the rescuers on the ground wearing the slime yellow-green parkas are PVSART members) or NHF&G by Wild Things when they had a manufacturing shop in North Conway over a decade ago, founded by John and Titoune Bouchard before they split apart.

Unlike the Terra Nova Bothy Bag in the the catalog that is less than 3 ft long, the one in the photo below the Black Hawk is over 8 ft long, which allows it to cover a patient in a rescue litter with room for rescuers to work on the patient from both sides (there is no floor, but a couple of clear plastic windows for light). Solar radiation even on very cold and cloudy days can warm up the interior of the Bothy Bag to nearly room temperatures.
 
Every time I go through there I stop to take a glance in that direction. The scrub and ground all does look amazingly uniform there and the "indent" to the trail doesn't stand out very well. I've only been there once in really bad conditions and I can totally see people struggling to locate it. A post with a reflector or something probably wouldn't be a horrible idea. (It's been a few years since I've been there so maybe new signage is there? I noticed a lot of new easel style signs this past Summer on some popular trails like Great Gulf warning of walking in alpine zone, etc.)
Not to go too far into the blazing topic of a few months ago on this forum, but... a blaze pole with a cross piece anchored in a cairn where the trail leaves open ledge and enters the thickets of dwarf spruce can do much to save lives of wandering hikers. After all,

We blaze trails closer than some manuals recommend, because
A) Hikers unfamiliar with a trail do depend on blazes to guide them, and
B) At treeline, there is much open ledge with no obvious trail corridor to follow
without blazes. Trails wind among clumps of spruce. Without blazes on rocks,
trees, blaze boards, and cairns, there is no way to tell where the trail goes.

If we think of blazes and especially blaze poles as being like channel buoys in coastal navigation, their benefits are rather obvious.



Every time I go through there I stop to take a glance in that direction. The scrub and ground all does look amazingly uniform there and the "indent" to the trail doesn't stand out very well. I've only been there once in really bad conditions and I can totally see people struggling to locate it. A post with a reflector or something probably wouldn't be a horrible idea. (It's been a few years since I've been there so maybe new signage is there? I noticed a lot of new easel style signs this past Summer on some popular trails like Great Gulf warning of walking in alpine zone, etc.)
 
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