National Post (National Edition)

Safe and sound, solo climber thanks rescuers

- The Canadian Press

STRANDED IN YUKON

good health and she said ‘Yes.’ I tried not to bug her too much, you know, just let her relax a little bit.”

Pitchforth said a Parks Canada team member spoke with Martinez and checked her well-being, “but she was very quiet.”

Avalanche debris scattered around her camp and unstable terrain from the earthquake­s stopped Martinez from continuing her climb or descending from the camp on the east ridge of the mountain, at about 3,900 metres.

“The weather was pretty horrible for most of the week,” Pitchforth said, adding the forecast suggested Martinez was initially not expected to be rescued until Friday or Saturday.

But at 5 p.m. on Thursday, as he and Parks Canada staff were meeting to discuss a retrieval plan, they heard from another pilot that the weather was improving, Pitchforth said.

Martinez was rescued from her camp at about 9 p.m. Thursday, Parks Canada said.

“Ms. Martinez is uninjured and was safely transporte­d to her support team in Silver City, Yukon,” it said in a statement. Climber Natalia Martinez, second from right, is seen after her rescue with pilot Ian Pitchforth, left to right, members of the Kluane National Parks rescue crew Sarah Chisholm, Scott Stewart and David Blakeburn, right, on Thursday. The area is a staging point for most climbing parties that head to the ice fields by ski plane.

Video released by Parks Canada shows a helicopter landing on the mountain near Martinez, who is wearing a helmet and goggles, her backpack by her side and her skis sticking out of the snow.

She’s seen smiling as she sits in the helicopter before takeoff.

Scott Stewart, who deals with visitors’ safety issues at Kluane National Park and was responsibl­e for the rescue mission, said Martinez “did everything right.”

“She had adequate planning, she had adequate experience and she had equipment, including communicat­ions for her chosen undertakin­g on the mountain,” he said.

Stewart said that immediatel­y after the earthquake­s, Martinez used her satellite phone to call her emergency reporting person who had the emergency contact phone number for Parks Canada so it could plan a rescue operation. “She was able to reposition herself in a safe location where she could safely wait out the following storm through the course of the past few days,” he said.

“We’re happy to report that Ms. Martinez is doing well.”

One climbing group remains on Mount Logan, and Stewart said they reported to him earlier this week that they are waiting out a storm.

“That group, I suspect, has another two weeks built into their itinerary, which allows them to successful­ly and safely have an enjoyable experience.”

Diane Wilson, superinten­dent for the Yukon Field Unit of Parks Canada, said the cost of the rescue operation is not yet known.

“Overall, for most searches and rescues, Parks Canada does recover the cost.”

Sian Williams of Icefield Discovery Tours, the company that flew Martinez to the mountain, said the woman had climbing insurance that would pay for the lift off the mountain.

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