Weber County search and rescue urges hikers to prepare for emergencies
Jul 3, 2024, 6:30 PM | Updated: 7:03 pm
OGDEN — Search and crew crews worry that less-experienced hikers are getting into difficult areas due to a popular treasure hunt.
Sgt. Kyley Slater with the Weber County Sheriff’s Office knows Utahns love to walk up the mountain trails but worries the inexperienced hikers are unaware of how quickly things can change.
Slater cited one rescue that happened on Monday on Ben Lomond Peak with a man who got caught in the snow.
“The weather, it changed,” Slater said. “He was hiking, all day by himself and ended up getting disoriented. It was snowing up on top of the peak, and the winds were too high to get a helicopter up there initially.”
Slater said crews started the rescue at approximately 9 p.m. but didn’t get him down safely until 4:30 a.m. the next day.
In another rescue Saturday, Weber County deputies reported that a treasure hunt drew two people a couple of miles up the Beus Canyon trail, which can be very technical with a high elevation gain.
“They were walking downhill. Kind of a steep embankment and ended up breaking their ankle,” Slater said.
The office said it had 7 rescues in June. Officials are worried that more people are unprepared, like not having a fully charged cell phone, which can be an extremely useful tool.
“We have the ability to send a location as long as they’re within cell phone range,” Slater said.
He said it’s thanks to a program called CalTopo.
Slater explained that deputies can not only receive a caller’s location but also track the route they took to get there. They can then use it to help navigate the lost hiker back out, but their battery has to be charged for it to work.
“We’ve had 3 or 4 this year where they’re just going up for a quick day hike, and all they’re using is their cell phone light to get out,” Slater said.
As the Fourth of July weekend approaches, Slater said hikers should bring things like an emergency blanket, a jacket, water, food, and even extra power for their phones, just in case something goes wrong.
And most importantly, don’t hike alone.
“A microburst or the weather can change while you’re up on the trail if you’re 3 to 5 miles away from the trailhead, and that happens, and you get cold, your body temperature drops, and it just makes it hard, that much harder for you to get out,” he said.
A pair of Utah treasure hunters needed rescuing after getting hurt