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Paddler's leg amputated in river rescue

Joined
Sep 6, 2021
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Location
Mount Solon, VA
I can't imagine what that scenario must have been like for all involved.

Not being a whitewater paddler I had heard of leg entrapment but never really understood it until I did a trip where I had to do a lot of wading in a river that was as jumble of large round rocks. On multiple occasions my foot would slip into a gap between the rocks and become wedged. I'd have to stop and balance while I worked my foot free. All of a sudden the possible seriousness of that situation became apparent. I could see that all it would take was loosing balance in strong current with a trapped foot to spell disaster. But I never even considered that one could become entrapped and never be able to free yourself with a little time and effort. For a solo paddler that's an even scarier thought.

Alan
 
That was an amazing rescue amputation in such a remote place. The guy is lucky to be alive.

I've always remembered a foot entrapment/drowning illustration in Bill Mason's "Path of the Paddle" book. This isn't it, but it conveys the same message with an illustration and words.

Dangers+-+Foot+Entrapment.jpg

I saw a person drown this way in the 1980s on the main Sacandaga River in New York, an easy whitewater but high CFS run that is popular for rafting. A commercial rafting passenger was flipped out of the raft. He tried to stand up, got his foot wedged in bed rocks, got forced over underwater, and drowned within ten minutes—even though several people were within 50 feet of him. We were watching from a bridge downstream as the body was being retrieved.
 
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