Weekend Herald

Kiwi survives mountain fall

This week Kiwis who have cheated death tell their survival stories. Today reporter Derek Cheng tells of his close call.

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One moment, I was sitting comfortabl­y on the side of a mountain in the Sierra Nevada, California, USA.

The next, I awoke on my back after being knocked out, blood blanketing my face and right shin. As I sat up gingerly, I realised there was so much blood around my left eye that it was fused shut.

It was just after noon on a cloudless July day. I was alone and 300m up the northwest face of Clyde Minaret, about 16km from the trail head and an hour’s drive from civilisati­on.

It was the latest of many solo mountain missions, the appeal of which understand­ably eludes most sane people because of the inherent risks of loose rock, exposure to the elements, and being completely out of mobile coverage.

I stood up and weighted my legs and feet and, thinking I hadn’t broken anything, simply started heading down. My body was stiff, however, and lacked any fluency of movement.

Without vision in my left eye, a lack of depth perception sent me tumbling over frequently, and I soon resigned myself to falling on my back, deeming it the least injurious way to fall.

When the terrain steepened, I down-climbed. Soon it became too precarious and I pulled a rope and climbing gear from my bag, and started abseiling.

As scans and tests would later show, I had suffered a tremendous impact to my cheek — just below my helmet, unfortunat­ely — that had caused several bones around my eye to cave in and jolted my head so forcefully that it bruised my brain, leaving it bleeding in the left frontal lobe.

My bloated hands indicated I had held them out to soften the blow. A thread of mangled flesh stood between two of my fingers. My neck suffered a fractured bone and ligament damage, as did two bones in my lumbar spine.

The injuries on the rest of my body suggested some tumbling. Bruising smothered my left shoulder and right chest where my right lung was bruised. Rockfall struck the top of my right buttock, ripping my clothes and leaving bloody streaks down my backside.

My feet and ankles had no sign of injury but I seemed to have partially landed on my shins, which both had deep gashes.

Yet I was making progress and I thought none of my injuries were too severe.

Seizures are one of the symptoms of a brain bleed, and I was lucky to be free of any as I abseiled. It was exhausting to find suitable places for abseil anchors, and at one point I found a spot to lie down and immediatel­y fell asleep for I don’t know how long.

It took me about eight hours and five or six abseils to get to the base of the cliff. I hiked down to Minaret Lake and then dropped into the forest, the glare of my headlamp replacing the evening hues of the sky.

My memory of this period is hazy. I seem to have circled around repeatedly, covering a distance in six hours that should have taken about one.

Eventually I lay down on the forest floor and passed out.

At 5am, after a few hours of shivery sleep, I awoke to mosquitoes biting my exposed skin. I sat up with anchors in my flesh.

I had no idea how far from the track I had strayed, and stumbled vaguely towards river sounds. To my good fortune, the woods parted to reveal the trail.

Within a few hours, I crossed the river and allowed myself a pinch of satisfacti­on, knowing that the track ahead was wider and more amicable.

This section was also a popular day hike, and it wasn’t long before I crossed paths with a couple who were aghast at my blood-covered face.

One guy accompanie­d me in the final 45 minutes of hiking. We reached the trail head roughly 24 hours after the accident, and then this good soul drove me in my van to Mammoth Hospital.

The hospital report notes: “Patient covered in blood . . . essentiall­y covered head to toe in contusions, abrasions, and laceration­s . . . multiple internal injuries including 1-2cm head bleed . . . multiple facial fractures . . . possibly unstable.”

Not only had I broken multiple bones — though my spinal fractures were not misaligned, meaning I could walk — but there were no facilities in Mammoth Hospital for brainbleed­ing.

I was flown to Renown Hospital in Reno and plugged full of fentanyl — an opioid stronger than heroine — and prepped for facial reconstruc­tive surgery.

It wasn’t until days after my surgery before the severity of my injuries dawned on me. The first sign was the relief from staff that I could still see out of my left eye. Then it was my face, which had puffed up to resemble some sort of lopsided Frankenste­in.

The surgeon had pinned five titanium plates across my displaced facial bones to hold them in position and allow them to heal. The area under my eye was also shattered, and a titanium plate was inserted to prevent my eyeball from dropping down.

Damage to my infra orbital nerve, just under the eye, numbed all sensation from my upper lip and teeth to my left temple, making it feel like my face was in a vice. While my continued coherence meant that the brain bleed had thankfully retreated, the reality of a long recovery with an uncertain outcome remained.

Now, six months later, my bones have healed. Soft tissue-injuries are taking longer to heal, including ligament damage in my wrist and knee, but I’ve been delighted to indulge in road cycling, hiking in the rugged Tararuas, and even occasional indoor climbing.

The feeling in my face has somewhat returned, and now it only feels as if I’ve been struck in the cheek by a cricket ball, rather than a freight train.

After months of battling my insurance company, they are now coming to the party on my US$250,000 ($371,950) medical bills.

I had only bought insurance two weeks before the accident. The only thing I can think of that is luckier than that is to have fallen off a mountain — and survived.

My bloated hands indicated that I had held them out to soften the blow. A thread of mangled flesh stood between two of my fingers.

 ?? Photos / Supplied ?? Derek Cheng feels lucky to have survived a mountain fall. Cheng (below) in hospital following his fall.
Photos / Supplied Derek Cheng feels lucky to have survived a mountain fall. Cheng (below) in hospital following his fall.
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