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***Breaking - Blackhawk Helicopter Crashes During Mt. Hood Climber Rescue!***
FOX News Channel - Breaking News
| May 22, 2002
| FOX News Channel - Breaking News
Posted on 05/30/2002 2:20:39 PM PDT by MeekOneGOP
***Breaking - Blackhawk Helicopter Crashes
During Mt. Hood Climber Rescue!***
Per FOX News Channel Breaking News announcement.
I will post further updates, if any from FOX News Channel........
TOPICS: Breaking News; News/Current Events; US: Oregon
KEYWORDS: climberrescue; helicoptercrash
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Anyone else see this or other report from another news outlet?
To: MeeknMing
It was absolutely horrible.
2
posted on
05/30/2002 2:21:51 PM PDT
by
hmmmmm
To: MeeknMing
Being reported on CNN and MSNBC, Fox reporting commercials.
3
posted on
05/30/2002 2:22:00 PM PDT
by
aomagrat
To: MeeknMing
I posted
this thread just after yours. It has some details, and a link to video of the crash.
4
posted on
05/30/2002 2:22:37 PM PDT
by
B Knotts
To: MeeknMing
MSNBC reporting 3 climbers dead.
5
posted on
05/30/2002 2:23:46 PM PDT
by
aomagrat
To: MeeknMing
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PORTLAND, Ore., May 30 (Reuters) - A National Guard helicopter trying to rescue six survivors of a deadly climbing accident crashed into Oregon's 11,237 foot (3,423-metre) Mt. Hood on Thursday and tumbled onto a glacier. The fate of those aboard the helicopter was not immediately known. The scene was shown live on local television with a stunned announcer saying, "Oh, if only this was a movie." Rescuers in National Guard Black Hawk helicopters had been lowered to an icy crevasse where nine climbers had fallen as they approached the summit. Three of those climbers were killed and the other six injured. Local station KGW-TV reported that crews equipped with oxygen tanks, life support and specialized climbing gear were moving toward the scene in tractors and said that rescue crews were concerned because rising temperatures threatened the stability of the icy surface. The station reported that the climbers fell on Thursday morning as they were about 800 feet (244 metres) from the summit of Mt. Hood, which is about 50 miles (80 km) east of Portland, Oregon.
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6
posted on
05/30/2002 2:28:18 PM PDT
by
Dallas
To: Dallas; hmmmmm; aomagrat; B Knotts; aomagrat;
Thanks for that update on #6, FRiend!
To: Dallas; hmmmmm; aomagrat; B Knotts; aomagrat;
Here's a pic.................
To: MeeknMing
Crap...
I don't think any of that Blackhawk crew made it. I hope I'm wrong, but this looks bad. It looks REAL bad.
9
posted on
05/30/2002 2:35:56 PM PDT
by
hchutch
To: MeeknMing
I think the 'copter crew made it for the most part. Fox is saying they should have been well harnessed in. My prayers are with them.
To: hchutch
I don't think any of that Blackhawk crew made it.I don't know, those guys are strapped into their seats tighter than NASCAR drivers. They might be O.K.
To: MeeknMing
MSNBC reporting 1 crewman critical.
12
posted on
05/30/2002 2:42:04 PM PDT
by
aomagrat
To: Dallas
>A National Guard helicopter trying to rescue six survivors...Just yesterday or the day before my Dad and I watched news coverage of a helicopter rescuing somebody of a glacier. I think that rescue worked okay, but it looked hair raising.
Does anyone know the details of this kind of thing?
Is the terrain flat enough and solid enough for the helicopter to land? Or does the copter have to hover and lower/raise people by cable?
(The reason I ask is I know that at some national parks there is a crazy enviro-wacko law prohibiting helicopters from touching down within the park even in resuce situations -- so copters can only direct ground workers or hover above ground situations... (There was a horrible incident last summer where a helicopter located a lost boy, but couldn't touch down so the pilot could only radio the boy's position to a ground team which -- thank God -- found the boy about 10 hours later!))
-- KotS
To: remaininlight
Said one crew member was in critical. Video almost looked like one fell out, but I couldn't tell
To: Texaggie79
Just Caught this on NWCN....., Prayers
15
posted on
05/30/2002 3:02:12 PM PDT
by
cmsgop
To: cmsgop
To: KissOfTheSith
Does anyone know the details of this kind of thing? As a helicopter pilot I can tell you it is one of the most nerve-wracking missions to be on. Any hovering over snow is made difficult by blowing snow hampering visibility and ruining any point of reference. Even if the snow is not blowing it is hard to hover precisely because of the lack of terrain definition, you can tell if you are moving forward, backward or sideways. Even with a radar altimeter it is difficult, you learn to rely on your crew chief since he can lean out and get a better view. Not a fun mission.
17
posted on
05/30/2002 3:03:00 PM PDT
by
ladtx
To: ladtx
That should be "you can't tell"
18
posted on
05/30/2002 3:04:11 PM PDT
by
ladtx
To: KissOfTheSith
"at some national parks there is a crazy enviro-wacko law prohibiting helicopters from touching down within the park even in resuce situations."American better stand up and resist these self-defeating assinine laws.
19
posted on
05/30/2002 3:05:07 PM PDT
by
NetValue
To: MeeknMing
Ay, caramba!! Upside down in the snow!! Wind gust?
Prayers for crew, passengers and families....
20
posted on
05/30/2002 3:08:26 PM PDT
by
tracer
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