Backcountry Pilot • Fish&Game officer survives cold night after crash

Fish&Game officer survives cold night after crash

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Fish&Game officer survives cold night after crash

Engine trouble blamed for crash in Salmon River

By Eric Barker of the Lewiston Morning Tribune

Thursday, January 1, 2009

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An off-duty Idaho Fish and Game officer survived a cold, wet night after crashing his personal plane in the Salmon River near White Bird Tuesday.

Paul Christensen, 23, was found unhurt but cold at 8:20 a.m. Wednesday about one mile downstream from the Hammer Creek recreation site and boat launch on the Salmon River. Christensen was flying from Moscow to Slate Creek Tuesday afternoon when he dipped into the Salmon River Canyon between Pine Bar and Hammer Creek. While flying over a gravel bar, he spotted a dark object he thought might be the body of a missing angler who drowned near Riggins in November. He took another pass over the object but was unable to tell what it was, so he attempted to land.

As he approached the bar the plane's engine sputtered.

"I went to give it throttle and it hesitated excessively," he said.

His plane, a Taylorcraft F21, lost altitude and the wheels hit the water short of the gravel bar. The plane flipped forward and landed in the water.

"I unbuckled myself, kicked open the door, jumped in the river and swam to shore."

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Once on shore he checked himself for injury and then tried to recover survival items from the plane. But he was unable to reach the aircraft and unable to start a fire. He wrote a note in the sand indicating he was unhurt and hiking upriver.

Christensen was wet from his midriff down, wearing street shoes, blue jeans, a hooded sweatshirt, jacket and a ball cap. He walked and scrambled along the steep riverbank for about four hours before it became too dark for him to safely negotiate the canyon and he prepared to spend the night.

"I gathered up large amounts of grass off the hillside, found a place to sit and covered my body with grass to act as some sort of insulation."

The night was cold with gusty winds.

While Christensen was coping with the elements, authorities were just becoming aware his plane may have crashed. Shortly after 8 p.m. the Idaho County Sheriff's Office was notified of an emergency locator transmitter signal received in the Grangeville area. A short time later the office was notified Christensen's plane was overdue. A search and rescue operation was mounted by the sheriff's office, Fish and Game officers and coordinated with the Idaho Division of Aeronautics. They began searching the Camas Prairie near Tolo Lake where the signal indicated the plane might be. But the signal was bouncing off the canyon walls and the crash site was not located Tuesday.

At daybreak Christensen resumed his upriver hike. Around the same time, Fish and Game officers Roy Kinner, Jim Rolle and George Fischer prepared to launch a jet boat to search the river canyon. They put in at Hammer Creek and proceeded downstream where they found Christensen just before
9 a.m.

"I had engine trouble and ended up crashing in the Salmon River in the dead of winter and somehow managed to walk away from it, so I figure I'm the luckiest man out there," Christensen said.

He credits surviving the cold night with keeping calm and thinking through his options.

The object he spotted on the bar was not the drowning victim.

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/Barker may be contacted at [email protected] or at (208) 848-2273. /
Last edited by chrisg on Mon Jan 05, 2009 8:46 pm, edited 1 time in total.
chrisg offline
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He was a little lucky and had a good head on his shoulders, sounds like to me.
skybobb offline
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Sounds to me like someone needs to track him down and invite him to join this site. I suspect this won't be his last interesting story.
kevbert offline
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Funny how those engines decide to sputter when your short landing a gravel bar without enough speed to hydroplane.

Damn :?
mr scout offline
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This sounds like the exact scenario that causes some pilots to wear a survival vest on every flight. While only a vest, it carries some of the basics that you can depend on having if you can get out of the plane at all. I'm guilty of having my emergency pack in the back. It's within reach, but if things got nasty enough, I might leave without it, hoping, like this guy, that I could go back after it. How many of you fly with something more than a pocket knife on your person? Be curious to know.

tom
Savannah-Tom offline
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Savannah-Tom wrote:This sounds like the exact scenario that causes some pilots to wear a survival vest on every flight. While only a vest, it carries some of the basics that you can depend on having if you can get out of the plane at all. I'm guilty of having my emergency pack in the back. It's within reach, but if things got nasty enough, I might leave without it, hoping, like this guy, that I could go back after it. How many of you fly with something more than a pocket knife on your person? Be curious to know.

tom


Good point, I don't pack anything besides a first aid kit in the plane.
I would hate to be on the ground in the cascades with only a first aid kit.

It is easy to think you could walk out of the coast range in a day, try that with a broken leg.

Small piece of pitch, matches, hatchet and small tarp would be a good start and not very heavy.

Oh... maybe the full auto that I have seen on here recently...in case you can't take the pain :shock:
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Start a fire

If it is not on your body, it is not survival gear. It is camping gear. When I fly I always cary at least two means of starting a fire, a knife and a flashlight. I usually carry a small eagle creek travel pouch. It contains a few more fire starting devices, a signal mirror, some first aid resources, an energy bar, a whistle, and a compass. Did I mention fire starter and tender.

Oh yea, I often have a firearm on my person.

Chet
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Let's see, it says he is 23 years old, frontal lobe not fully formed for a male until age 25 according to my wife. I hear from her (wife) she thinks it might be 45 sometimes. I think it is more likely he was playing in the water and came up short. :lol:

The body on the gravel bar is creative though! :oops:
Mauleguy offline
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Wow, I was home here in Grangeville and haven't heard a word. Of course I haven't seen any days it was worth going to the airport to go flying. I am glad he made it out in good shape.

Todays weather at the shop here in Grangeville was winds gusting to 50 this morning, rain, hail, and we finished up with a dusting of snow.


WW
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Definitely a good reminder to always have safety gear on your person - not in the plane. I always wear a safety vest. Its a stearns inflatable, with big pockets. Have waterproof lighters and matches, first aid kit, celox (stops severe bleeding), space blanket, rain poncho, knife, rope, fishing gear, sat phone, and PLB in the pockets. Everything in waterproof bags/containers. Still less than 8 pounds total. I also wear it for winter flights, and while snowmobiling in the winter. Hope I never need any of it. But this story reminds me it is worth wearing. Glad to hear he's OK.
Rhyppa offline
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mr scout wrote:Funny how those engines decide to sputter when your short landing a gravel bar without enough speed to hydroplane.

Damn :?


Or, if he had the O-200 in the F-21 and advanced the throttle too quickly, they will bog down on you and want to quit until you retard the throttle all the way back, then sloooooowly advance it till it catches. I've been there a time or two.

Gump
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I don't go flying anymore without my MicroFix PLB on my person. And like Mr. Harris said. If you're not wearing it it's camping gear.
Kenny Chapman offline
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GumpAir wrote:
mr scout wrote:Funny how those engines decide to sputter when your short landing a gravel bar without enough speed to hydroplane.

Damn :?


Or, if he had the O-200 in the F-21 and advanced the throttle too quickly, they will bog down on you and want to quit until you retard the throttle all the way back, then sloooooowly advance it till it catches. I've been there a time or two.

or, if he had an 0-540 T, u had better advance it slowly also, as it can
produce the bogs if pelting rain is coming down, as it was in wyoming
one stormy night, as i was damn fortunate to have one mark heiner
talk me out of landing on the hiway, and proceed to the KAFO airport
with the heading bug firmly in hand ...seems big
carburated motors require a lot of air to run...!
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jomac

Hey, I've had it happen training in a Supercub. Student gets excited after a good bounce, slams the throttle forward and cough, cough, sputter.
flynbeekeeper offline
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Tom

I wondered if he had remember to pull the carb heat on before throttling back to land. Weather that day was cold, wet and windy. I was surprised he got from Moscow to Hammer creek that day.
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wings, cary me over the big rocks

Never had to try it out yet, but I carry a full survival kit and insulated coveralls in the back, but I wear a vest with a few basics - fire starting stuff, a signaling mirror, a large heavy trash bag for shelter, space blanket and basic medical stuff. I also dress for the conditions. No shorts or T-shirts and good boots. The most important thing in my vest though is a "Spot" GPS locator. The moment I saw it I bought it and I don't fly out of the pattern without it.
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Paul is a pretty experienced young man in that Taylorcraft. Sorry to hear the airplane is probably lost, but glad to hear he managed to survive a tough survival situation.

Whatever might have caused the accident, we need to learn from the misfortune of others, and this accident provides a vivid reminder of a few very important considerations when flying over anything but the most densely settled areas:

1) Carry some survival gear on your person, either in your pockets or in the pockets of a vest. And WEAR the vest. It's sure easy to leave that vest in the baggage compartment, hangar, etc. Wear it. Survival gear in the hangar isn't.

2) Wear clothing, including footgear, appropriate to the country over which you intend to fly. Again, if you're not wearing it, you may not have access to it after the accident, either due to fire or as in this case, water.

3) Take some survival training if possible. If not possible, take your kit out of the back of the airplane, and camp out in your back yard in it. Convince yourself that you CAN survive, even in pretty brutal conditions, like this accident sounds. Mental attitude is a VERY big part of wilderness survival.

4) File a flight plan. Don't like the FAA? Fine, file one with your spouse, neighbor, etc. Just make DANG sure that whoever you file your plan with knows SPECIFICALLY when they should push the panic button, and precisely WHERE that panic button is located. If you want to trust your life to a SPOT messenger, do so, but make sure there's someone on the other end who both knows when to react and who to call in an emergency. Better yet, carry a SPOT and a PLB.

This young man did a lot of things right, which allowed him to survive. We all make mistakes, and I'm sure some were made here, but the point is we should learn from those mistakes, and improve OUR odds of survival if we are ever faced with a survival situation.

Fly safe, folks.

MTV
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After Sparky's accident a couple of years ago, I decided I needed to get my survival stuff out of the bag in the back and on my person. In addition to the above mentioned gear, I too have my microfix, all sorts of medical gear (sister-in-law is a nurse), survival manual, parachute cord, and at least three different ways to make a fire and signal a passing plane. Also a couple of sources of light. Those glow sticks are a good thing to have around.

At one time Zane had some pics of the survival vests that we all dumped out on the grass at JC this last summer. If those pics aren't available anymore, maybe it would be worth showing again. Also, Rob Hunter has a great list of gear that he gives out on at his presentations. I thought he had it on his website, preparedpilot.com, but I don't see it. I'm sure he'd post it if asked.

I agree, if it isn't on you, it's camping gear. Sparky's was in the back...and it burned with the plane.
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I am one of those that has my gear in the baggage compartment. I have a good survival kit but as in this case I might not be able to get to it.
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I have to agree with MTV on clothing. Try putting on a parka or snowpants with a broken arm or ribs-almost impossible. Wearing the clothes that you would need on deck might sound like overkill until you need it and having just the basic survival stuff on your person is cheap insurance.
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