07/17/2019
Rescue in Peppersauce. Sunday, May 26th, 2019-07-17
Ray Keeler – NSS 23245
[email protected]
Mary C______ (55) and daughter Catya (26) decided to do a mother/daughter recreational trip to Peppersauce. It was the first time caving for each of them besides some tourist caves. Both had bicycle helmets with chin straps and two lights strapped on. Both were wearing tennis shoes.
Mary and Catya were in the Main Lake Room 700 feet from the Entrance when Mary slipped on the mud at the bottom of the ladder. It was 3:40 pm. Mary went down hard and discovered that she could put very little weight on her right leg, especially if there was any movement involved. Her right knee was very painful. Realizing she was in trouble, she was able to do a very slow, one step at a time up the ladder, and then slid on her hip to the Big Room, dragging her leg behind her. She got under a space blanket and Catya went for help.
Blase LaSala (U of A grad student in Geology) and I were doing LiDAR scanning in the Main Corridor (with Taylor Handschuh and Gatlin ?) and were asked if we could help. After passing us, Catya went out to call 911. Cell reception is poor at the Peppersauce parking lot so she drove to better reception and made the call.
After an initial assessment (conscious, alert, primary complaint, patient past history and any meds being used (2 for a heart murmur)) we determined that with a splint we could start a self rescue while Mary could still help.
I used both my Cave Skinz extended knee pads with neoprene as the splint. One kneepad was put on top, one at 90 degrees on the outside so they worked for both lateral stabilization and padding.
Mary had an excellent frame of mind and attitude during the entire evacuation.
Blase and I took sides and acted as moving crutches and moved to whereever support was needed for each of obstacles. Mary did butt slides and hobbling where possible.
Oracle Fire arrived when we were in the Third Room from the entrance. Pinal Sheriff arrived when we were in the Second Room. They rigged a stokes litter for the climb down outside the entrance.
We had Mary to the cars by 6:15pm so about 2.5 hours after the fall.
Catya was able to drive her mother to the ER and emails the following Tuesday provided the follow up. Mary had a tibial plateau fracture (top of the tibia, lower right leg). She was headed for an orthopedist for an MRI Weds. They still need to check for soft tissue damage.
The rescue went smoothly. Everyone communicated well, and each set of moves were talked about and agreed upon before starting each set.
The photos are mine and Catya's.