The Manila Times

CLIMBER FOUND JUST IN TIME ON DEADLY NZ MOUNTAIN

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WELLINGTON: A climber trapped for seven days in freezing conditions on a New Zealand mountain has been found in the nick of time, with rescuers saying he was unlikely to have survived another night alone. Terry Harch, a 29-year- old Australian soldier, was spotted waving his arm in the snow on the South Island’s notorious Mount Aspiring, where more than 30 climbers have died over the past decade. His emergency beacon signal was picked up in the United States and the co- ordinates relayed to New Zealand rescue authoritie­s. Rescuers managed to reach Harch late Thursday and he was airlifted out during a break in bad weather on Friday afternoon. Search and rescue officer Geoff Lunt said Harch had “clearly made some good decisions to be able to survive the bad weather, heavy snow and high winds.” Helicopter pilot Sean Mullally said initial missions up the mountain did not detect any sign of Harch and it was not until the fourth sweep that they saw his waving arm. Harch, an experience­d climber in New Zealand’s treacherou­s Southern Alps, activated his distress beacon on Monday, the day he was due to come off the mountain. The signal from the private tracking device was picked up by a supplier in Texas. The region has seen a lot of fresh snow in the past few days. The wind chill factor is minus 16 degrees Celsius (3.2 degrees Fahrenheit) and the avalanche advisory is high. A rescue team reached Harch on Thursday with warm clothing, tents and food as they waited for the weather to improve. New Zealand Mountain Safety Council chief executive Mike Daisley said winter mountainee­ring was a high-risk activity and in this case “the right call was probably not to go”.

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