Bells Incident

Bells Incident

Page Type Page Type: Trip Report
Date Date Climbed/Hiked: Jul 31, 2009

What Our Plan Was

In Loving Memory of Kevin Hayne (June 15, 2010) A great friend and climbing partner. You will always be missed and I will never forget you through these next years of my life. I will miss you a ton.

Climbers are sometime’s faced with life-threatening descisions. Many escape death while many others become apart of it. Many think It will never happen to them and that there somehow invincible. Let me tell you, when things go wrong, that thought will change. Me and Kevin were faced with the Inevitable on July 31, 2009.

The Maroon Bells are nicknamed the “Deadly Bells” on purpose. They kill people. They are notorious for loose rock and steep cliffs. That’s an accurate description. If you fell at any bit of this climb you would end up 1,500 or so ft. on a rock pile. Between the two of us, we have significant experience. I am good with the more difficult class 4 and class 5 terrain. Kevin is very good with route finding and class 1-3 navigation. The Maroon Bells, while considered Colorado’s hardest 14ers, were in our range of experience. Both of us are also fairly good at weather decision making in the high country, though there is no “good” weather predicting at that altitude. A storm is able to form and come in a matter of minutes without notice.

The Climb

We left at 7:30pm on Thursday to get there as early as possible. Arriving at 1am we went to sleep and woke up just about an hour later to get an early alpine start at about 2:00am and we began “the approach.” The approach was wet, but fairly easy. After finding a cairn that marked our ascent route at 5:30am, we worked our way up the most frustrating section of the hike – 2,800 feet of elevation over the course of about 1.5 miles. Which means, it’s just about straight up. It’s annoying and tough to follow.

At about 8:30am we reached the top of the ridge at 13,300.
The 1rst Obstacle of South Maroon PeakThe First Section of the Climb
The final section to the summit involves playing the cairn game – moving a cross of very skinny ledges with loose rockand loose gullies as lead by cairns. Kevin was particulary good at finding the exact route. This was a fun way but very exposed and not the most solid rock at all. As a result, we finished this section, which is supposed to take about 1.5 hours for the fast climber, took us an hour total. Everything seemed to be going our way.
Me Getting Ready for the Final Part of South Maroon PeakLooking at the second part of the climb to the right.

The summit was great. We arrived on time at about 10 a.m. We planned the early summit to do the traverse. I wouldn’t recommend anyone get near it, the views are incredible. You can see EVERYTHING, from the dangerous looking summits of Pyramid and Capitol, to the spacious snowfield on Snowmass Mountain. It was incredible. We talked to each other, and the weather was great so far with hardly any clouds, and we were making great time. We decided to give it a go. We didn’t stay long on the summit, and headed down the saddle towards North Maroon Peak. We were faced with some technical (class 4 AND class 5) down climbs before we reached the low-point on the ridge at 13,700ft – the top Bell Cord Couloir (A couloir is a steep snow-filled gully). You look down into the vast air and huge cliffs and that alone scares most off this traverse or the mountain for that fact.

The Incident

We searched for the route up North Maroon and we both thought the route lead different ways. Kevin thought the route went around left and up. (Which I started leading and knew was not it due to how hard it was, well above low 5th class) I thought it was straight up which was true but we did not get to the point of finishing the traverse. A storm was starting to form and roll in. It had came out of no where with "fingers" coming down. Knowing we could not backtrack or keep climbing because the lightning would kill us as we would only be going up for a while until we hit one of the summits. As we sat at the top of the couloir, the storm blew in. The weather made a tremendously quick change for the absolute worse. At 10:45, it was thundering like crazy and snowing to where you could not see much at all.
The Steep West SideIt was either the icy traverse, frozen couloir, or this side.

A while later, the storm was still getting worse. We decided our only choice was to attempt to slide down this couloir with a trecking pole used as a brake. The couloir itself had a good 3 inches of good snow on top of ice. It seemed okay to glissade down. Kevin went down first and lost control flying into into a moat on the side. I went down next scared and I lost control going to the left of the couloir slamming right into the rock with my leg. We both knew this was first not possible and second suicidal. I was on the opposite side of Kevin and I knew I had to get on his side but I could not traverse the snow. I pulled out a piece of emergency rope I have and tied it to my waist and Kevin used what he could as an anchor to belay me over. I got across safely. Now there was dangerous snow above us and below us. Slippery Cliffs to both our sides. We pulled our space blankets and hunkered down to wait out the storm. As the storm slowly began to “taper” off and the fog surrounded us, we realized just how bad our situation was. The climbs up to both South and North Maroon Peaks were now technical AND exposed to long deadly falls. Neither of us had packed for a snow climb – our crampons and ice axes were at home. The left and right edges of the couloir had melted out, creating intermittent and very deep cave-like openings that apparently are known as “moats.” Thus, down the couloir was not an option either.

This is where things got pretty dangerous. I was getting cold even with all my extra layers due to my feet getting a little wet from the slide down. We knew we had to move to not get any colder. We thought our only way down was this couloir. Kevin brought up the idea of glissading down. While it seemed like a great idea to get down quickly I was not up for it due to the dangerous conditions of the snow without snow/ice gear. Kevin lead the way by attempting to slide down it with his trecking pole. In a normal situation, You would have your ice axe to arrest with, stopping the fall. This time, there was nothing but a hiking pole. As I knew this was a bad idea for him, I was sure right when I thought he was dead. He was being flung left and right through the couloir on a very speedy downwards trek. He had lost control and was leaving my eye sight into the clouds. After a few HUNDRED feet of downwards movement he finally “exited” the couloir on the left (north) side, headfirst, into the cliff wall on North Maroon. His helmet took the full force of the fall and turned him around enough that my feet hit snow. He had basically slid a few hundred feet down at high speed into a cliff and didn’t break a single bone.

He was bleeding from somewhere. I had a hard time moving my leg as it was also bleeding from hitting the rocks. We were both scratched and scraped everywhere, and Kevin’s right leg was exceptionally painful. I stood there starting to get quite emotional because he was not responding to me and I knew I couldn’t loose a good friend and live with him dieing right in front of my eyes. He finally replied and screamed up to me not to try this, but to stay put. I DEFINATELY agreed. In the matter of act, I couldn't of got the guts up to send myself down that thing with just a trekking pole to self arrest with. At this point, I realized how badly our luck had turned. His SPOT tracker, a small GPS/satellite device that allows us to tell home that were “OK” or notify 911 that we were in trouble, had come off of its harness during the fall and continued down the couloir. We had just lost the last connection to help for at least a couple of days. But things improved slightly. He searched (slowly) around the area, and as Kevin looked further down the couloir, he realized that the moat he was in continued downwards for a VERY long time. He had a chance to get down by crawling through the moat. He yelled to me that he had a chance of getting it.
Capitol PeakOne of our last photographs. As you can see the weather is starting to move in.

From here, the two of us were split up, with no way back to one another. I was starting to get colder and I knew my only way out was to find a diffcult line up all these cliffs back over the summit of Maroon Peak and back the route we came from. Maybe it's just me, but I also don't want to ever be rescued unless I physically can't do it at all. I thought you got yourself in the situation, now find a safer way out. Kevin started down as the fog FINALLY started to lift. I finally chose to go on this uncharted territory. I have never prayed so much. This included traversing the steep loose rock with cliff sections every five feet. I knew I would be history If I totally slipped. While I wasn’t sure what Kevin did at this point, he worked his way down the couloir, using some ledges along North Maroon to get down as far as he could. At 13,300ft, he discovered his SPOT tracker in the middle of the snow. Unfortunately, it was in a very steep section, and he had no way of getting to it. All sudden I stepped on a rock that was loose and caused it and others to fall down the couloir. I caused a rockfall. One of the rocks actually bumped his SPOT tracker out of the couloir down into a moat on the side! Within 10 minutes he had the device.

With the orange box in his hand, he was forced to press the 911 button. He knew pressing the button would mobilize the search and rescue (SAR) teams that were necessary, but It would cause panic back at home. He pressed the button.

Kevin was stopped by the couloir and the end of the “moats.” He was stuck. He chose to traverse the side of North Maroon Peak in hope to find the route down that peak. Of course, soon he climbed himself into a trap when he was stuck on a ledge with 300 ft. cliffs below him and no where to go except hope the rescue will come.

Being alone and tired in the wilderness can be a trying experience. I started seeing things thinking my parents were right there with me. But then I would find out its just a rock. I would go on random acts of crying. You got to pull your head together when your in these situations but I just couldn't help it. Route finding and searching can be tough, especially when there is nobody to backup your decisions. My route needing the best routefinding especially with the downclimb. I finally climbed my last unstable cliff and the summit was ahead. The weather seemed to be coming again. I just knew, with more rain, this would be harder. The weather held off luckily and my route finding was pretty strong. I got off track once but in about 1.5 hours I was back at 13,000 ft. at the saddle where we were 12 hours ago.

The Aspen Mountain Rescue

It was about now that SAR sent out an airplane to try and spot us both. Unfortunately, wind kept him from circling as low as he wanted. I started to head down the steepest part from the saddle in an "interesting" condition. I got about 1,000 ft. down when I heard something. At sometime around 6:30pm, the SAR helicopter came searching for us. I was extremely happy, we had a good chance. After a number of passes, they finally spotted Kevin, and with some help from his flashlight, he made first contact. There were about 30 guys on the search and rescue looking for us.

By 7:15, an Aspen Mountain Rescue team was on the ground and in contact with Kevin. Kevin conveyed my last known location. Now every 10 minutes or so I would fall to the ground from exhaustion both mentally and physically. I had been awake for about 50 hours. I got down this face to the trailhead. I took a 15 minute rest trying to get it in my head what was happening. I stayed there. And then I heard someone yell,” Noah?”I yelled,” Yeah, I’m Noah” The two mountain rescue team members came to me in a rush. I told them I was alright and not hurt. I asked if Kevin was safe and they told me he was and they were working on getting him down off the cliffs. I was very relieved to hear that news. At once, I drank a ton of water and was feeling almost back to normal.

We both got out on to the trailhead after dark and were fed dinner. I layed in the warm Mountain Rescue Truck thinking of this traumatic day. It’s something that I never wish to experience again. I was first worried about my parents because I was suppose to be home 6 or so hours ago. I knew they would not be thinking positively. They drove us to the cabin they had in Aspen. I made a bunch of different phone calls letting everyone know I’m okay. The sheriff and SAR directors talked to me to get a feel for how things went and how I was. They told us we made all the right descisions except going down the snow and seperating. Soon we were at a hotel that thankfully Kevin’s dad had booked for us. Finally, after almost 22 hours of climbing we got some much needed sleep.
Me on the summitOn the summit of Maroon Peak

We Owe Our Lives To The Aspen Mountain Rescue

We owe so much to the Aspen Mountain Rescue as well as the Pitkin County Sheriff. They were all great to us, and I can’t thank them more for the work they voluntarily do to help people caught in unfortunate circumstances. It’s amazing what they did and continue to do.


The Warning SignWe were lucky the mountain gave us a second chance.

The quote I followed the whole time.

“You always have to make descisions, unless you know your situation is going to get better.”

-Written by Noah and Kevin

Proverbs 3:5
"Trust in the LORD with all your heart and lean not on your own understanding"


I give God the glory!
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Comments

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noahs213

noahs213 - Oct 28, 2010 12:03 am - Hasn't voted

Re: whew

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Sierra Ledge Rat

Sierra Ledge Rat - Aug 9, 2009 5:21 pm - Voted 10/10

Experience...

What doesn't kill you makes you stronger. Experience comes from getting into bad situations. The key is to get the experience without getting killed in the process. I had similar experiences as yours when I was a 16-year novice old climber. I am lucky to be alive, and so are you. Learn and move on.

noahs213

noahs213 - Oct 28, 2010 12:02 am - Hasn't voted

Re: Experience...

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triyoda

triyoda - Aug 9, 2009 5:56 pm - Hasn't voted

Lessons learned?

Thank you for providing your account. IF you could summarize your takeaways what would they be?

1. Would you start on a commited traverse like this again when it was already raining at the trailhead?

2. After summiting the first peak, in retrospect, if you had just descended the route you went up, without continuing the traverse, would that likely have prevented being iced in up high at the saddle?

3. When you were at the saddle, I realize there is a danger of lightning, but not as bad as being on an open summit. Do you think you would have been better off just hunkering down without going into the couloir? Did you have enough warm clothes to just to hunker down? Basically I think you are very lucky to not have taken a fatal fall in the couloir; I would tend to think the risk of lightning was lower than the risk of the couloir (I realize this is subjective assessment of relative risks that is why I am asking for you thoughts).

I am just trying to get sense of what I can learn from this situation, from you who lived it.

Thanks again for the report and I am glad you safe.

noahs213

noahs213 - Aug 9, 2009 7:32 pm - Hasn't voted

Re: Lessons learned?

1) It was raining at 2 in the morning. Which we expected because the weather report called for it. It was a clear day when the sun came up. We knew weather might roll in after 11 or 12 as usual in Colorado.
2) If we descended the regular route it would of been both longer and the descent from the saddle is quite steep added the snow. It would of been safer, that's for sure. We should of done that, but it was clear weather until the middle of the traverse.
3) It would of been safer to not go down the couloir. Sadly, we did not find that out until we climbed ourself into a trap. That's one of the big mistakes we made. That and seperating. I did have many layers on and emergency equipment. It didnt help that my feet and hands were soaked though. That's what cost me and kept me cold. It's hard to hear the noice of lightning and not be afraid that high up. That was our mistake. Next time we can learn from these things. That's what counts. I have finally moved past this and continued my climbing thank God. Thank you all of you for your comments. As I'm very happy to have lived through this. It really does open your eyes up.

noahs213

noahs213 - Oct 28, 2010 12:02 am - Hasn't voted

Re: Lessons learned?

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KevinCraig

KevinCraig - Aug 9, 2009 10:13 pm - Hasn't voted

You lived, so learn

Hopefully you have learned to respect the mountains and the potential dangers they pose. Demonstrate that respect by getting proper training and experience before doing anything like this *ever* again. Thankfully, you don't have the death or injury of a rescuer on your conscience.

Already you are sounding like you are taking this way too lightly. You are "finally past this and have continued your climbing???!!!!" Dude, you and your friend almost DIED less than a month ago and endangered countless other people in the process. This happened because you lacked skills, experience, judgment and knowledge. You need to stop and SERIOUSLY reflect on this and map out and follow a process to acquire the skills and experience to SAFELY and RESPONSIBLY take on challenges like this in the future. NOT shrug your shoulders, say "whew!" and keep on the same course.

Safe and responsible fast and light climbing is the result of years of experience and skills development. One of the most important principles is the willingness to turn around if you are not prepared for the conditions you encounter or are likely to encounter on any given day.

noahs213

noahs213 - Aug 9, 2009 11:37 pm - Hasn't voted

Re: You lived, so learn

Ok. I realize all of that. First of all, I'm not shrugging my shoulders. This left me in a emotional wreck. Of crying, not being able to sleep for a couple of days. This dragged me down in every way. I was even thinking about therapy. I really don't appreciatte you walking all over this issue when you have absolutely no idea how I felt or how experienced I am. Especially when you have not gone through this specific situation. I had the experience for it. Do you think I just did this out of no where? You have no room to talk. Absolutely none. My Saviour had this happen to me for a reason. I can't dwell on the past my whole life. I have to eventually move past it.

And you really think I could of just turned around?? Oh ya, let me go climb back to the summit and get struck by lightning. Have you read this full TR at all?There is a difference between constructive critsism and just basically downing what I did. I could barely even handle this. You think I can handle you saying this when you have no idea where im coming from? There comes a time standing up for yourself especially when it comes to climbing. Especially by just almost downing this whole situation. You have absolutely no idea about this whole thing. NONE.

This is for reading purposes and for people to find out what actually can happen. Maybe I shouldn't of posted this. Because people like you critsize me, and think I'm just a lame kid that does not know what he is doing. It makes me sad to hear stuff like this to me or others. Yes, I have alot to learn but I had experience for this climb.

The rescuers told me personally that I did everything right. I brought extra layers, 3 kinds of fire starters, compass, map, guidebook, rope, chalk, emergency blanket, everything. The only thing I did not bring was an ice axe and crampons. Which I learned from! and will bring next time. So please get your comments of "This happened because you lacked skills, experience, judgment and knowledge." out!! As i know multiple sources of even Everest summiters on the rescue team that told me I did everything right except not bringing the ice axe and crampons. They are WAY more reliable sources for me then your "advice". They actually have an idea of the situation and were there.

Yes, there are things I learned from this. There are things I could of done better. But wow, I just don't apprecaite this kind of crtisizm and assumptions you make when you don't know any details except this small TR. . . .It just makes thing's harder for me. I don't mean to offend you. But that did just make me a little upset reading that.

Kevin8020

Kevin8020 - Aug 10, 2009 12:07 am - Hasn't voted

Re: You lived, so learn

I agree with what Noah said and can confirm, being the other climber, that SAR considered us "lucky" but stated that we did do the right things!!

I disagree that we lacked skills, experience, judgment, and knowledge. We made TWO bad judgments - weather moves fast, and bringing ice axe/crampons on a snow-free route. That's all that went wrong, when you really look at things.

My trip report, with is not posted here, obviously differs after we separated, but understand that after I fell, I continued downwards on rock in a SAFE manner for a few thousand feet before eventually becoming cliffed out. Even at that point, I was not worried for MY safety, knowing that I was prepared for the night if necessary. Yes I know that anything regarding the deployment of SAR is a dangerous business, but I had safely gotten myself to a safer altitude in a calm manner consistent with the safest route off of the mountain in my situation. It was the best I could do. YES IS SCREWED UP to begin with, but as I stated in my trip report, after my screw up, I did the right thing. That's worth some merit.

Sure, we didn't have the correct gear, which we learned from, and we made a bad weather decision. You live in Colorado, you know the weather changes FAST. I know a climber who was on Pyramid, and even his TR noted how fast this storm moved.

We didn't shrug our shoulders and say "whew" as you put it, but have significantly changed our climbing habits. I will always carry an ice axe even on routes that are 100% snow free in case I am forced to move into snow.

Also, one thing I will thoroughly disagree with you on is the willingness to turn around when not prepared for conditions encountered/likely to encounter. Understand that the ENTIRE climb of Maroon Peak was done SAFELY and WELL WITHIN OUR EXPERIENCE. Weather from the summit looked fine. When the weather did move in, we were in a situation where moving onwards was safer than turning around. YES, those situations DO EXIST! And for the record, I've turned around on many occasions myself... on both hard and easy peaks.

And just out of curiosity, what good is it to stop climbing after something like this? We learned our lesson, dwelling on it won't help a bit. I plan on getting back to some easier climbing this week, and plan on being much more cautious with weather and in what I bring.

Kevin8020

Kevin8020 - Aug 10, 2009 1:45 am - Hasn't voted

Re: You lived, so learn

Ok, so I have to ask you two, and I'm asking this calmly, NOT angrily - these are serious:

1) What would you have done differently in our position?

2) Now that this is all said and done and we learned our lesson (and no doubt we learned our lesson, and we know we learned it the hard way), why are we being lectured again? Isn't coming this close to dying and being talked to by search and rescue enough to teach us a lesson? It was for me...

Also, I want to add that we're not posting this trying to brag and show off about what we survived. No, I posted this more as a "what not to do" kind of a think - a sort of "hey - here's a reminder to be careful!" kind of a post - no bragging intended at ALL.

And we're not defensive because we don't want the advice, we're defensive because WE NEARLY FREAKING DIED! We've been criticized for taking this too lightly - and we're getting defensive because of how HEAVILY we've taken this. The LAST thing I wanted to read today was someone else trying to a teach me a lesson. Nearly dying was enough for me, thanks.

noahs213

noahs213 - Aug 10, 2009 1:55 am - Hasn't voted

Re: You lived, so learn

As said by one "Some would criticize you; if not for the disclaimer. But I believe this is primarily a coping mechanism used to make people believe that they are somehow above having this happen to them (that they are somehow too smart or skilled). Something like this could happen to anyone at some point in life. We are not in control EVER in my opinion." I just don't get it. The only mistakes we made was:

1) Not bringing our Ice Axe and Crampons (which almost all climbers wont when they see absolutely no snow on there route)

2) Going down that snow underneath a Moat in fear of the lightning(Which was really a smart option to get away from it but it got us stuck)

3) Seperating. (Which is the worst mistake we made)

I just don't get your guy's perspective of we are inexperienced, no knowledge or whatever he said. When this could of happened to any climber of any level! We were told we made the best descisions except seperating. The Rescue team told us they wished alot of climbers that were stuck followed what we did. That's saying alot. I accept critisizm. And am teachable when it comes to all aspects of life. But what he said makes absolutely no sense. A bit of exageration I say. And in my opinion I think it was out of line. So please understand where im coming from.

noahs213

noahs213 - Oct 27, 2010 11:51 pm - Hasn't voted

Re: You lived, so learn

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Foxy Long Bottoms

Foxy Long Bottoms - Aug 10, 2009 1:06 am - Voted 10/10

WOW!

What a crazy day. I'm glad you guys are ok. You have a great story to tell now.

noahs213

noahs213 - Oct 28, 2010 12:01 am - Hasn't voted

Re: WOW!

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kpthomson

kpthomson - Aug 10, 2009 12:53 pm - Hasn't voted

Whats the Mountaineer saying...

DEAL. Thats exactly what you did. You dealt with it. Congrats.
An old Nepalese saying:
If you face your fears, and learn to manage them, you grow spiritually. Climb On!

noahs213

noahs213 - Oct 28, 2010 12:01 am - Hasn't voted

Re: Whats the Mountaineer saying...

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T Mac

T Mac - Aug 10, 2009 1:17 pm - Voted 10/10

The Bells

They chewed me up and spit me out after I'd just moved to Colorado years ago when some friends and I tried what we thought was a simple multi-day loop hike. I'm still amazed how quickly my situation from "okay" to "oh, no!" and bravado turned to prayer. Glad you made it out to tell the story and to confirm the Bells deserve their reputation.

noahs213

noahs213 - Oct 28, 2010 12:01 am - Hasn't voted

Re: The Bells

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EastcoastMike

EastcoastMike - Aug 10, 2009 3:22 pm - Voted 10/10

?s

Glad you guys made it off the mountain without serious injury. If you had hunkered down above the chute and waited out the worst of the storm, do you think you would have been better off returning to the summit and then returning the way you came? Also I was wondering what was the route you guys had chosen rated as?

Kevin8020

Kevin8020 - Aug 10, 2009 3:45 pm - Hasn't voted

Re: ?s

I think that yes, waiting it out and returning the way we came would have been the smartest idea. The reason we didn't is because this storm was taking it's precious time to leave. I'm not the best with time, but I'd say it took at least 90 minutes, maybe closer to 120 for the snow to stop and the heavy cloud cover to leave. It's hard to be willing to sit and wait that out, but would have been the best decision. Had I not slipped on the snow and been separated, that's what we both would have done. In the end, that is what Noah did. Meanwhile, I ended up making my own route down North Maroon.

And the route from South to North is rated class 4 IF you're good at route finding - however it is a class 5 if you're not careful. South Maroon Peak is a standard class 3.

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