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    <title>Outdoor Japan</title>
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	      <title>The Fall</title>
		  <desciption><![CDATA[<p><em>&ldquo;That has blood on it. It must be mine,&rdquo; says Mr. Watanabe as we pack up our gear on a two-meter square makeshift tent site parched precariously above the Kami-unbe River. I laugh out loud, partly because of the grotesque humor, but mostly a laugh of relief. He had made it through the night, and it finally seemed like he would be OK. </em></p>
<p><img alt="" src="/uploaded/Image/magazines/issue20/The_Fall_1.jpg" />Just 16 hours ago, this 58-year-old real-life superhero slipped while  descending a cliff in the remote backcountry of the Shiretoko World  Natural Heritage site. The other three members of the hike, all younger  than half his age, were looking for an easier way down. Watanabe took  his usual route, straight up, down and over anything and everything  within the park boundaries.<br />
<br />
As I saw him getting ready to start  the descent, I said, &ldquo;You shouldn&rsquo;t try that!&rdquo; But he quickly  disappeared over the ledge and, just seconds later, I heard the crash.  From where I was, I couldn&rsquo;t see the 10-meter freefall down to the rocks  at the base of the cliff, but unfortunately his fall didn&rsquo;t stop there.<br />
<br />
He landed on a 60-degree slope of rocks and continued to bounce down the  mountain. In the 200-meter long, 50-meter wide landslide gulch, there  was only one large semi-stable rock. Watanabe crashed into it and it  stopped his descent.&nbsp;<br />
<br />
He wasn&rsquo;t moving, and my heart skipped a beat. Then my eyes focused on  his bloody hands clenched tightly around his head. &ldquo;He is alive, for  now,&rdquo; I thought as a single-minded sense of purpose hit me like a  tsunami. I yelled to Billy, my&nbsp;Hungarian couch-surfing guest who was  closer to getting around the cliff when the accident happened. &ldquo;Get to  him as fast as you can without injuring yourself. He will be bleeding a  lot. Don&rsquo;t act surprised.&rdquo;</p>
<p><img height="167" width="250" alt="" src="/uploaded/Image/magazines/issue20/The_Fall_2.jpg" />A minute later, I heard another huge crash and consecutive  bounces. My heart skipped another beat. Then I saw Billy&rsquo;s backpack  bouncing down the gulch and starting a small landslide. I thought I  should do the same and get to Watanabe quickly but realized we were  still a two-day walk out without a trail and, if even one piece of  essential equipment such as a lighter, cell phone, headlamp or stove was  broken, it could make this very bad situation even worse. It wasn&rsquo;t  worth the short-term gain.&nbsp;<br />
<br />
It took  me 10 minutes to get around the cliff and to the edge of the landslide  gulch into which Watanabe fell. Even by rough Hokkaido backcountry  standards, this was no place I would normally hike. To have a seriously  injured person in the middle of it made things all the more complicated.<br />
<br />
After  slipping several times myself, I finally reached him. He didn&rsquo;t seem to  know where he was or even that he had fallen. He was talking about his  sister in heaven, and he had a huge wound on his forehead that covered  his face in blood, a partially swollen shut black eye, bloody hands and  who knew what else.</p>
<p><img alt="" src="/uploaded/Image/magazines/issue20/The_Fall_3.jpg" />As if time wasn&rsquo;t already of the utmost importance, the sun had quietly  set into the Sea of Okhotsk. Billy and I, experienced guides, started  checking Watanabe&rsquo;s condition and talking through our options. First we  stopped the bleeding&hellip;then started checking vitals. The flesh wounds,  while needing stitches, weren&rsquo;t life threatening. Internal injuries and  shock were what worried us.<br />
<br />
I asked him to stand up, as I checked for broken bones. He didn&rsquo;t  seem to have any major breaks but most likely fractured ribs and  fingers. That was a relief but, as soon as I took my hands off him,  unable to stand by himself, he nearly fell further down the landslide.  We had to get him out of this area before the twilight ended. It was an  uneasy prospect.<br />
<br />
Melissa&rsquo;s cell phone was the only one with  reception, but the call wouldn&rsquo;t go through. Next we checked the map to  find it would take us several hours to find a semi-flat area to pitch a  tent. Our options were quickly shrinking. Stay the night on this 45  percent grade or hike in the dark through rough terrain with an injured  member.</p>
<p><img height="167" width="250" alt="" src="/uploaded/Image/magazines/issue20/The_Fall_4.jpg" />As we were getting Watanabe warm and fed, a thick low cloud  rolled in. Watanabe was starting to talk more coherently and said, if it  rained, the hike down would be too dangerous because of falling rocks  and the rising water level in the stream we planned to follow back to  the sea.&nbsp; We had to get to lower elevation as soon as we could. <br />
<br />
We  followed the bamboo grass along the edge of the landslide. Chances of  another serious injury in the bamboo were much less. I scouted out the  easiest way down while yelling back directions. In several places the  bamboo grass abruptly ended at a cliff. After 30 minutes or so we  dropped 200 meters, and I found a safe place to enter the headwaters of  the Kamui-unbe River. As the water level rose, the rocks became  slippery, and we changed into our felt-bottomed tabi. It was almost 11  p.m.<br />
<br />
Watanabe was making good time but sort of throwing one leg in front of  the other and had a few slips. He was trying to walk his normal pace,  but I had to keep reminding him he wasn&rsquo;t in his normal condition. We  hiked down the river for more than an hour with our headlamps.&nbsp;</p>
<p><img alt="" src="/uploaded/Image/magazines/issue20/The_Fall_5.jpg" />We wanted nothing more than a flat place big enough for a tent, but  there was nothing close. Another hour later, it started to look as  though there may be some chance of finding a site. I dropped my pack and  searched around in the bushes, eventually finding somewhere. It was  only borderline safe and didn&rsquo;t look very comfortable, but it was nearly  1 a.m., and we were dead beat.<br />
<br />
After we were set for sleeping, I checked Watanabe&rsquo;s vitals again. He  seemed to be doing OK but had a fast pulse, and I was worried about  internal injuries. With no other real options, we all quickly went to  sleep.<br />
<br />
During the night Watanabe was snoring, and it was the only  time in my life I was happy to be awaken by such a sound.&nbsp; When we got  up at 7 a.m., Watanabe&rsquo;s first word was&nbsp;<em>&quot;ittai&quot;</em> (ouch), and we all chuckled. It wouldn&rsquo;t be until 5 p.m. when we finally reached the coast.&nbsp;</p>
<p><img height="225" width="151" alt="" src="/uploaded/Image/magazines/issue20/The_Fall_6.jpg" />internal bleeding, broken ribs and fractured fingers. The reasons he made it out alive were a lot of luck, his amazing strong will and our training and experience. We were all fortunate because any one of these may not have been enough.<strong><br />
<br />
THE FOUR P&rsquo;S</strong><br />
For more information on what to do before, during and after an accident, visit <a target="_blank" href="http://www.nols.edu/wmi/">www.nols.edu/wmi/</a>. And please note if you head out into the wilderness, you should get some training before you go.<strong><br />
<br />
PREVENTION</strong><br />
Given we were off trail, two days walk out and had no reception, nor place for a helicopter to land, Watanabe had no business taking any way but the easiest way down (around) the cliff.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <br />
<br />
<strong>PREPARATION</strong><br />
Take some Wilderness First Aid classes. If you spend a fair amount of time outdoors, you will most likely use it.&nbsp; I don&rsquo;t know a single person who thought it was a waste of time or money.</p>
<p><strong><img height="225" width="151" alt="" src="/uploaded/Image/magazines/issue20/The_Fall_7.jpg" />PLANNING</strong><br />
Make sure you know emergency numbers to call and that someone knows where you are going and when you plan to return. Also make sure everyone knows the numbers and the way out. Watanabe was our guide.<strong><br />
<br />
PACKING</strong><br />
Among other things, your group should have more than one first aid kit, extra food and batteries.<em><br />
<br />
Comments and questions to </em><a href="mailto:ryan@idioimagers.org"><em>ryan@idioimagers.org</em></a><em>.</em></p>]]></desciption>	
	      <author><![CDATA[Ryan Libre]]></author>
	      <pubDate>Sat, 24 Jul 2010 09:40:33 +0000</pubDate>
	      <link>http://www.outdoorjapan.com/magazine/story_rss/108</link>
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