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To: All
Here's a remarkable story:

MOAB, Utah, May 2 — Pinned by a boulder for five days and having run out of water, a climber amputated his own arm with a pocket knife, rappelled down a cliff and walked until rescuers found him. Aron Ralston, 27, of Aspen, Colo., was in serious condition Friday at a hospital in Grand Junction, Colo., following the ordeal Thursday.

Ralston was climbing Saturday in Blue John Canyon, adjacent to Canyonlands National Park in far southwestern Utah, when a 1,000-pound boulder fell on him, pinning his right arm, authorities said. Initial reports said the boulder might have weighed 200 pounds, but rescuers who later went to the site said it weighed closer to 1,000 pounds.

Sheriff’s Sgt. Mitch Vetere told NBC’s “Today” show that the team that went to the site concluded “he had no other option” but to cut off his arm because the air-based search team “wouldn’t have seen him from the air.”

Ralson was able to tell rescuers that he ran out of water on Tuesday, and on Thursday morning decided that his survival required drastic action. Using his pocketknife, he amputated his arm below the elbow and applied a tourniquet and administered first aid. He then rigged anchors, fixed a rope and rappelled 75 feet to the canyon floor. He hiked downstream and was spotted about 3 p.m. by a Utah Public Safety Helicopter.

The search for Ralston had begun the same morning, after authorities were notified he was four days overdue reporting for work.

Vetere, who led the air search, spotted Ralston with two hikers near a trail head. Ralston was then loaded into a helicopter for the 12-minute flight to a hospital. Ralston was “thoroughly exhausted,” Vetere said. “The only thing he wanted was water.”

Ralson walked into the emergency room on his own.

“I’ve never seen anybody who has the will to live and is as much of a warrior as Aron is, and I’ve been doing this for 25 years,” said park ranger Steve Swanke, who was with Ralston in the emergency room. “He is a warrior period.”

Ralston’s expeditions have been known to trigger awe, said Brion After, manager of the Ute Mountaineering store in Aspen where Ralston works. After said Ralston has climbed 49 of Colorado’s 14,000-foot-plus mountains.

"To be honest, sometimes we get pretty scared with some the things he’s doing,” After said.
http://www.msnbc.com/news/908232.asp?0cv=NB10

83 posted on 05/02/2003 10:05:10 AM PDT by mountaineer
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To: All
They may as well go ahead and get out the IV and the chemicals (if his performance in the Winona Ryder case is any indication) - Mark Geragos will represent Scott Peterson, story here.
84 posted on 05/02/2003 10:16:58 AM PDT by mountaineer
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To: mountaineer
I am in total awe of the climber, Aron Ralston. The area where he was is so remote and rugged.
95 posted on 05/02/2003 5:54:36 PM PDT by Utah Girl
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