Category: Article Categories

Letter from the Editor Spring 2022

“Yeah, we’re getting OT for this.” “Oy! What’s one and a half times… zero?” Such is a common joke shared among rescuers during missions. I usually hear this one when the mud reaches a certain depth, a hill takes a certain incline or if our team has been out past zero dark thirty. Occasionally I’ll

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Meridian Winter 2022 PDF

Click here to view the full PDF version of the Summer 2023 Meridian in magazine-style layout. To download for off-line viewing, right click the image and select “Save Target As…” (or something similar, depending on your browser). Sponsor Spotlight: PatagoniaBesides making high-end technical wear, Patagonia was the center of one of the most positive pieces of

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President’s Message Winter 2022

This year, my team, Rocky Mountain Rescue, celebrated our 75th year providing SAR services to the Boulder County, Colorado community and beyond. We had a weekend of festivities, and past members from all over the country came by. It was a great time, and I must have looked at more than 5,000 photos putting presentations

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The Most Common Wilderness Injury: A Case Report

The subject was a 60-year-old female hiking down from the summit of Pikes Peak (14,109 ft) on a sunny, September day. She stepped on a rock and twisted her left ankle, resulting in lateral (outside) left ankle pain only and no other injuries. El Paso SAR (Colorado Springs) and Douglas County SAR (South of Denver)

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Team Rescues Nonverbal Teen

Rick Lindfors – Meridian Editor in Chief GLENDALE, Calif. – Intelligence gathering and quick thinking enabled rescuers to safely bring home a teenager who had gone missing in a park in Los Angeles County. The teen, who was autistic and nonverbal, presented a challenge in communication that serves as a lesson for other SAR teams. 

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Lessons in Leadership

Rick Lindfors – Meridian Editor in Chief   The March 2022 Fourth Thursday session brought in Codey Gandy, an instructor with Echelon Front. Former Navy SEALs Jocko Willink and Leif Babin started Echelon Front to bring their lessons learned from combat and apply them to the private sector. Willink and Babin were commanders in Task

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Letter from the Editor Winter 2022

Situational awareness. Head on a swivel. There are plenty of phrases or keeping an eye out and pointing out anything out of the ordinary. As SAR people we’re pretty good at this; clue awareness, rigging inspection and kit preparation all require attention to detail and are  things we train and maintain our skills in. It

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President’s Message Winter 2018

How many of you have ever heard someone ask, “What does the MRA do for me?” If you’re like me, it’s happened more than once, and at least in my experience, it usually comes from people who are new to mountain rescue. Having been asked this question many times over the years, I realized I

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The “AHA Moment”: Managing Risk in Avalanche SAR

By Alexis Alloway, Winter Training Coordinator, Everett Mountain Rescue This article first appeared in its original form in The Avalanche Review, 37.2, December 2018 It’s 9:40 p.m. on a stormy winter evening. Twenty-eight inches of new snow, with around 1.5 inches of Snow Water Equivalent (SWE), has fallen in the last 24 hours, winds have

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Book Review: 58 Years: My Life in Mountain Rescue, by Lynn Buchanan

Book Review by Doug McCall, Seattle Mountain Rescue “58 Years: My Life in Mountain Rescue” is a fun read about the early days of mountain rescue. Lynn Buchannan joined the Mountain Rescue Council (MRC and the original name of Seattle Mountain Rescue) after being approached by Ome Daiber in 1952 (Daiber, 1907–1989, is known frequently

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Body Recoveries in Wilderness Medicine

By Chris Van Tilburg, M.D.; Chair, MRA MedCom; Crag Rats, Hood River, Oregon Body recovery in mountain rescue is an important task for wilderness first responders. We handle recoveries differently than rescues of live persons because they are usually less urgent and sometimes have a forensic component. My mountain rescue team, Crag Rats, of Hood

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Backcountry Zero, P-SAR

By A.J. Wheeler, MRA MedCom, and Stephanie Thomas, Executive Director, Teton County Search and Rescue Foundation “An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure.” Benjamin Franklin As search and rescue members and medical providers, we are often faced with the reality that it will take us hours and sometimes days to reach those

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SAR Puppies

Shaun Roundy, Utah County Sheriff Search and Rescue, MRA Intermountain Region Chair Remember your early years in search and rescue? Remember the energy, the enthusiasm, the eagerness to learn, the hunger to do and see and experience absolutely everything? My teammate J.T. Ferrin—an energetic, second-year recruit—recently coined a perfect term for such volunteers: SAR puppies.

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The Cabin

By Debbie Kelly, Alpine Mountain Rescue Shortly after Mountain Rescue Aspen (MRA) was incorporated in 1965 there was a mission for a lost 10-year-old boy that sadly ended in a recovery. The family was so grateful for the rescuers’ efforts that they donated the funds for a small pan abode type cabin (600 square feet)

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Editor ’s Note

As a writer and editor with many years of experience, I can tell you that it doesn’t take a specialist to cover the stories I have in my career. I’ve been a newspaper police reporter, magazine editor, columnist, correspondent and consultant for such diverse entities as John Jay College of Criminal Justice, the International Association

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Meridian Summer 2011 PDF

Click here to view the full PDF version of the Summer 2023 Meridian in magazine-style layout. To download for off-line viewing, right click the image and select “Save Target As…” (or something similar, depending on your browser). B a c k c o u n t r y R e s c u e r(www.backcountryrescuer.com) is

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The MRA Honor Guard

By Tim Kovacs, Founding Commander, Honor Guard; MRA President 1998-2000  Influences and Inspirations  The MRA Honor Guard was established as an unofficial service in 2000. The idea was not new. I have been able to trace the concept of it as far back as at least the late 1960s, when people including former MRA president

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2011 MRA Spring Conference Report

By Dave Clarke This year’s conference was held in Eagle County, Colorado from June 17th to 19th. MRA members from all of our regions came together for a weekend of fun, education, sharing and problem solving. From the beginning, this year’s event was billed as a return to our roots. The theme was incident management

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