Reno Gazette Journal

American explorer says he thought he would die during 11 days in cave

- Andrew Wilks ASSOCIATED PRESS

ISTANBUL – An American researcher who spent 11 days stuck in a Turkish cave after falling ill said Thursday that he thought he would die there before a complex internatio­nal rescue operation got him out.

Mark Dickey, 40, appeared relaxed as he spoke to reporters at a hospital in Mersin, southern Turkey, where he is recovering from his ordeal.

Asked if he ever gave up hope while trapped more than 3,000 feet undergroun­d, Dickey replied, “No. But there’s a difference between accurately recognizin­g your current risk against giving up.

“You don’t let things become hopeless, but you recognize the fact that ‘I’m going to die.’”

Dickey fell ill on Sept. 2 with stomach bleeding while mapping the Morca cave in southern Turkey’s Taurus Mountains. He vomited blood and had lost large amounts of it and other fluids by the time rescuers brought him to the surface on Tuesday.

What caused his condition, which rendered him too frail to climb out of the cave on his own, remained unclear.

Dressed in a blue T-shirt and with an IV line plug attached to his hand, the experience­d caver from Croton-onHudson, New York, thanked the Turkish government for acting “quickly” to get the medical supplies needed to sustain him down into the cave.

He also praised the internatio­nal effort to save him. Teams from Turkey and several European countries mounted a challengin­g operation that involved pulling him up the cave’s steep vertical sections and navigating through mud and cold water in the horizontal ones.

Rescuers had to widen some of the cave’s narrow passages, install ropes to pull him up shafts on a stretcher and set up temporary camps along the way before the operation could begin. Medical personnel treated and monitored Dickey as teams comprised of a doctor and three to four other rescuers took turns staying by his side at all times.

“This honestly was an amazing rescue,” Dickey, who also is an experience­d undergroun­d rescuer, said. “This was an amazing example of internatio­nal collaborat­ion, of what we can do together as a country, as a world.”

Commenting on the “insane” public focus on his rescue, he added: “I really am blessed to be alive. It’s been a tough time. While I was trapped undergroun­d – I was trapped for 11 days – I learned that I had a nation watching, hoping, praying that I would survive: Turkey.”

In a later interview with ABC’s “Good Morning America” show, Dickey recalled the moment he cleared the cave’s entrance. “I was happy to get to the surface and see those stars and smell the fresh air. That was a good moment,” he said.

He also paid tribute to fiancee Jessica Van Ord, who accompanie­d him on the expedition and left to obtain medical products that could be administer­ed in the cave. “She made the climb out, she made the climb back in with the medical supplies,” Dickey told the broadcaste­r. “The second she came into that cave camp at a thousand meters with four bags worth of fluid, that was a game changer.

“She saved my life, period,” he continued. “She is one hell of a woman, one hell of a caver, one hell of a rescuer, one hell of a paramedic. She’s awesome.”

Dickey will continue his recovery at Mersin City Hospital. Laughing and joking during his brief media conference on Thursday, he said he would “definitely” continue to explore caves.

“There’s risk in all life and in this case, the medical emergency that occurred was completely unpredicte­d and unknown, and it was a one-off,” he said.

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