On Friday, March 7th, at approximately 6:17 p.m., the Siskiyou County Sheriff’s Office Dispatch Team received a call from a skier that had injured his leg in a skiing accident at approximately 10,000 feet on Mount Shasta.
The reporting party, a 39-year-old male, was an experienced backcountry skier from Canada and had spent the prior two days summiting and exploring the mountain. During his final descent through Avalanche Gulch Friday evening, he crashed and sustained a serious injury to his lower leg. Unable to move, the skier, who had been traveling solo, managed to call 911, prompting a rescue effort.
The Siskiyou County Search and Rescue Team (SAR) and Mount Shasta Avalanche Center & Home of the Climbing Rangers were then mobilized to respond to the Bunny Flat parking lot from which they launched a series of hasty teams, including skiers, a snowmobiler team, and a snowshoe team. When rescuers reached the injured skier, they determined that he had suffered a broken tibia/fibula but was in otherwise stable enough condition to be skied down the mountain in a litter. At approximately 10:32 p.m., the Climbing Rangers and SAR team arrived back at Bunny Flat with the skier and delivered him to an awaiting ambulance.
This incident underscores a few important reminders about backcountry travel, particularly in wintertime:



In closing, we’d like to thank the USFS Climbing Rangers and our SAR volunteers for their fantastic work to retrieve the injured skier swiftly and safely.