How one slip on the Franklin River triggered a race to save a rafter's life
When Valdas Bieliauskas fell into the Franklin River, it triggered an extraordinary rescue mission that pushed everyone to the brink.
Valdas jumps from one boulder to another.
It's a simple rock hop, one he's made hundreds of times in his 50 years of rafting.
But this time, in the remote and rugged Tasmanian wilderness, it goes horribly wrong.
Valdas slips — and falls into the thundering rapids of the Franklin River.
His left leg jams in a narrow gap between two boulders.
"My friends tied ropes around me and tried hauling me out," Valdas tells Australian Story in Lithuania.
"But the leg was so tightly wedged that their efforts were fruitless."
Around 13 tonnes of water per second are flowing down the river, pouring onto him.
It is the beginning of a harrowing 24-hour ordeal, and one of the most complex rescue operations in the state's history.
For the first time Australian Story can reveal the extraordinary setbacks rescuers had to overcome during the precarious mission, including serious injury and unexpected equipment failure.
Crews have also spoken in detail about how they confronted the option of last resort – a high-risk underwater amputation.
Valdas' fall prompted one of the most complex rescue operations in Tasmania's history. ( Supplied )
"I felt so conflicted. If this goes ahead, you might kill him," Intensive Care flight paramedic Rohan Kilham says.
"But even if it all goes perfectly, he'll never be the same again."
An SOS from the Great Ravine
Valdas is an experienced adventurer, drawn to the freedom of wild places and the adrenaline rush of a challenging river run.
The 66-year-old Lithuanian has travelled the world with a group of paddling mates, trying to tick off a river on five continents.
Valdas's rafting adventures have taken him around the world. ( Supplied )
Valdas and his friends want to travel to five continents.
Valdas (on right) grew up kayaking and rafting rivers in the former Soviet Union. ( Supplied )
The last stop on their mission was Australia, and an epic multi-day pack-rafting journey along the Franklin River.
On November 22, 2024, the group of 11 is five days in.
They're in the Great Ravine, a spectacular and formidable gorge.
They decide the conditions aren't right to run the rapid ahead; instead they will portage their catarafts down this stretch of the river.
Valdas scouts the route ahead on foot.
It's after midday when he loses his footing.
"I think it was my hydro-boot with its hard sole that made it slippery on rock," says Valdas, speaking to Australian media for the first time.
In a split second, he is trapped at Coruscades rapid; submerged up to his chest in cold water, about 10 degrees Celsius.
For 40 minutes, the rafters try to free their friend.
When all their efforts fail, they send an SOS message via satellite phone.
"All of us were lost. We felt uncertainty and we didn't know how everything will finish," Lithuanian rafter Arvydas Rudokas says.
There's always a way — until there isn't
Over the next five hours, police, paramedics, doctors and swift water rescuers are winched into the remote scene.
They use spreaders, hydraulics and airbags in a bid to create space between the boulders trapping Valdas's leg.
They drill a tripod into the rocks to create a pulley system and shift his body in various directions to try to extricate him.
"The rescuer even grabbed me by the waist to haul me up, but my leg wouldn't budge," Valdas recalls.
"I think, if he'd been stronger, like Schwarzenegger, he might have managed to uproot me, leaving the leg behind."
The rescuers consider every idea, no matter how outlandish it seems.
Every attempt fails.
Intensive Care flight paramedic Rohan Kilham was one of six rescuers at the scene. ( Supplied )
"How does someone's leg go into a crack and not come out?" paramedic Rohan says.
"Surely there's a way — there's always a way.
"And there wasn't."
As the hours pass, the rescuers are repeatedly struck by how calm Valdas appears.
His wetsuit is helping him stay warm, and friends bring him hot food and drinks every 30 minutes to keep his body temperature up.
"You could see the determination in Valdas's eyes," swift water rescuer Adrian 'Ace' Petrie says.
"Even though his body was deteriorating, in his mind he was not giving up."
But despite his stoicism, there is growing fear that Valdas will not survive.
"I began to think, maybe I'm destined to stay here, stuck, forever," Valdas says.
Valdas was given pain medication during the gruelling rescue. ( Supplied )
His leg or his life
The crews stay with Valdas through the long, dark hours of the night. His friends keep the hot drinks coming.
But the elements are taking their toll, and hypothermia starts to set in.
Valdas receives pain medication as the hours pass.
"He was getting colder. He'd lost a fair bit of conversation. His demeanour had totally changed," Ace says.
By the early hours of the morning, it is clear only one option remains — and it's the option nobody wants.
"It was a big mental hurdle, realising that we were going to cut his leg off," Rohan says.
"I'd never had to hurt someone to save their life."
Swift water rescuer 'Ace' Petrie tries to free Valdas's leg from the crevice.
Valdas doesn't speak much English, so rescuers call on Arvydas, who is a medical doctor, to deliver the grim news.
"Valdas asked, 'So I will become handicapped?' Maybe, Valdas. But if not, you will die here in this hole," Arvydas says.
Valdas nods his head, meaning, "Alright, do what you need to do".
The amputation will take place at first light.
"I prayed to God, that's all I could do. Even as a medical person, I couldn't help," Arvydas says.
'I knew I'd broken something'
The only doctor among the rescue crew, Nick Scott, is tasked with amputating Valdas's leg above the knee.
No amount of experience could have prepared him for surgery underwater, in the wilderness, with very few resources, on belay.
The doctor longs for the support of a colleague, but the towering cliffs of the ravine make communication almost impossible.
"I felt isolated," he said.
As he makes his way down the wet rocks towards the water's edge, the unthinkable happens.
He slips and falls.
"I put my hand back and all my weight went through my hand," Nick says.
"I immediately knew that I'd broken something."
It's his wrist.
He lets out "a few expletives", realising the amputation can't go ahead as planned.
"Nick was pretty shattered," swift water rescuer Ace says.
"When you're in those scenarios, you like to see them through."
Communication was difficult in the remote location.
The ground crews get a message out: another doctor needs to be flown in. The big question is whether Valdas will survive another few hours.
"His power and strength were dramatically decreasing," Arvydas says.
'Like stepping off a cliff'
It's mid-morning when the new doctor, Jorian 'Jo' Kippax, himself an experienced white-water kayaker, is winched into the scene.
He feels overwhelmed as he hears the loud roar of the river, and takes in the faces of the people who have worked all night on a precarious rock platform.
The doctor also agonises over the decision to amputate, but everyone agrees Valdas is running out of time.
"The inevitable consequence of him staying there was death, and that was going to be quite soon," he says.
The doctor lowers himself down beside Valdas.
Dr Jo Kippax prepares for the amputation. ( Supplied )
Immediately he feels the pull of the water, wanting to suck him under.
He wedges himself in an awkward spread-eagled position, and takes a breath.
"There was a moment, a real sense of, I really, really don't want to do this."
Once he starts, there is no going back.
"It was like stepping off a cliff. All of a sudden from that point, you were in freefall and the only endpoint is an amputated leg," paramedic Rohan says.
The moment the saw snaps
With general anaesthesia not being possible, Valdas is knocked out with ketamine.
Jo can't see the leg, so he opts to do the surgery with bare hands, so he can feel what he's doing.
The velcro tourniquets don't work under water, but he improvises using ratchet straps.
Then he starts the procedure.
He cuts away the muscles of the thigh, "leaving the tremendously strong femur".
"We are trained to saw through this using a Gigli saw — a fine wire which has got sharp serrations on it," he says.
"It's very light, which is why we favour it. But it's also pretty delicate.
"And in this case, it broke."
Jo's heart drops.
Fortunately he manages to break through the rest of the femur.
Within seconds Valdas is free.
Jo helped Valdas onto the stretcher, where he was put on a mechanical CPR machine. ( Supplied )
"Suddenly, he came backwards into my arms. I was waiting for a gush of blood, but there wasn't," he says.
"The entire procedure, although it felt a long time to me, only took about two minutes."
Crews haul Valdas out of the water and up a rock face.
As Arvydas watches, he is devastated.
"The colour of his skin, and the body … my diagnosis was Valdas is dead," he says.
He returns to his camp and is silent for several minutes.
He only tells his friends to pray for Valdas.
The second stage of the rescue
Everyone is aware that the amputation doesn't guarantee Valdas's survival.
After 24 hours in the water, there is an "extremely high chance" of hypothermic cardiac arrest.
Initially Valdas responds well, but then he starts to crash.
He stops breathing, so the paramedics put him on a ventilator.
Then his heart stops beating.
"There's a little part of you that thinks that we killed him as his rescuers," Rohan says.
Arvydas notices that no one makes eye contact with him.
He asks the rescue crew if Valdas is dead.
Arvydas Rudokas was one of the Lithuanian rafters on the trip. ( Australian Story: Tom Hancock )
"I couldn't say yes, but I definitely couldn't say no," Rohan says.
Valdas is hooked up to a mechanical CPR machine before he is winched up to the chopper.
By the time he arrives at hospital in Hobart, the machine has been keeping his heart beating for 90 minutes.
"If your heart stops beating on the side of the Franklin River," Rohan says,
"Except that Valdas died of a hypothermic cardiac arrest, and it's one of the really unique ways where you actually have a chance."
Because hypothermia slows the body's systems down so much, Jo says, humans can survive "quite long periods of not breathing or very little heart activity".
Six rescuers were on the ground with Valdas. ( Supplied )
The last hymn you hear before heaven or hell
A paramedic has called ahead to alert the hospital that Valdas urgently needs to go on a heart-lung bypass machine, called ECMO, if he is to survive.
The ECMO machine warms and oxygenates his blood outside his body and then pumps it back in, until they can restart his heart.
Valdas stays on the machine in a coma for four days.
As he wakes, he hears a hymn playing over and over in his head.
"The last hymn you hear before ending up in heaven, or in hell," he says.
"After the hymn I open my eyes and see white — a white ceiling above. I was waking up in the ICU ward."
Valdas regained consciousness in hospital. ( Supplied )
While doctors, nurses and paramedics are overjoyed, there is concern he has suffered brain damage from the accident.
Jurgita Rakauskaite-Stanwix, a member of the Hobart Lithuanian community, comes in to help with translation.
She holds his hand and translates for doctors as they undertake tests to assess his neurological state.
On the second day, Valdas surprises everyone when he speaks in English.
"He said, 'I'm survivor!'" Jurgita says.
"I was in tears. Nurses were in tears. It's just such a beautiful moment. And he is. He is a survivor."
Before long, Valdas meets the man who amputated his leg in the wilderness.
Valdas meets his rescuers in hospital. ( Supplied )
Jo also works as a trauma specialist, and becomes Valdas's treating doctor.
"I felt like I had to apologise. And he too was quite emotional," the doctor says.
"We both looked at his leg, and looked at each other, and said, 'I'm sorry, this is the way it is.'"
Valdas knows the amputation was the right call.
"Otherwise I would still be stuck there to this day. I would have two legs, but I would still be over there," he says.
'Life is a beautiful thing'
In late January, Valdas returned home to Lithuania's capital Vilnius.
His sister Rasa is helping in his recovery.
"This accident has given me the understanding that in life, everything is possible. Every challenge can be overcome," she says.
When Australian Story visited Valdas in May, he was walking on crutches.
Now, he's learning to walk again with a prosthesis.
Australian Story met Valdas in Lithuania. ( Australian Story: Tom Hancock )
"I survived. I endured. That's the greatest joy," he says.
"As for the leg, that's not a problem.
"The main thing is being alive and life is a beautiful thing."
Arvydas says his friend was a legend with two legs, and is now a "double legend".
"It doesn't matter. Broken leg. Cut leg. But alive," he says.
A lot went wrong for Valdas, but a lot went his way, too.
His thick wetsuit kept him warm.
He was wearing a life jacket — without it, Ace believes he "probably would have got sucked under the rock".
If it had rained even a few millimetres, the river could have risen and drowned him.
The marathon rescue involved two helicopters, 500 kilograms of gear and a record-breaking 57 winches.
And, communication problems which dogged the rescuers were helped when an AMSA jet was flown overhead later in the rescue to provide critical radio communications.
Valdas is grateful for those who saved his life.
"The Australian people were fantastic. It brings tears to my eyes when I remember their care," he says.
"If it had happened in a place other than Australia, heaven knows what would have happened to me."
Valdas and his friends in Lithuania. ( Australian Story: Tom Hancock )
A vow to finish what he started
Valdas now has the "crazy idea" to return to the Franklin River in 2026 and finish the journey that changed his life forever.
"Because that incident interrupted our expedition, the Franklin River venture remained unfinished," he says.
"I don't know whether anyone has ever gone rafting with a prosthesis."
Arvydas would be at his side — and their rafting party may include a new member.
Jo has formed a strong bond with Valdas.
"Valdas is a tremendously strong, independent, accomplished person," he says.
"This idea that Valdas might want to come back and do the Franklin doesn't surprise me one little bit.
"And I'd love to do that trip with him."
Watch Australian Story's 'The River' part 1, 8:00pm Monday June 23, on ABCTV and ABC iview .
'The River' part 2, on Monday July 7.
Credits:
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

News.com.au
an hour ago
- News.com.au
The lights will be back on at Toowoomba's Clifford Park racecourse on Friday, July 4
The lights will be back on at Toowoomba Turf Club on Friday and no-one is happier than its chief executive Grant Sheather following a 'significant' drop in revenue for the turf club. Night racing was initially scheduled to return to Toowoomba on Saturday but it would have clashed with the $1 million Group 1 Brisbane Cup greyhounds final at the new Q22 Parklands at Ipswich. The Clifford Park track was plunged into darkness on March 15 when the lights failed midway during a race after a contactor in a distribution board burnt out. Jockey Cobi Vitler later told Racenet he feared his mount would clip heels in the ensuing chaos as the five riders in the small field opted to continue racing. The last two races of the meeting were abandoned and an investigation was launched into the power failure, fast-tracking an upgrade of the outdated electrical system. Sheather said the club had been through a tumultuous period without any upgraded lights to help ignite its revenue streams. 'Primarily it's been about the juggling of sponsors' expectations and hospitality bookings that we had previously,' he said. 'It's been quite enjoyable racing during the day, especially during the winter months, but there's just no opportunity to get revenue outside of that hospitality which we traditionally have in the past. 'With nearly 700 horses in work, that costs a lot of money so we need to make a lot of money from hospitality to pay for the black hole which is training.' Sheather said having Saturday racing during the day had forced Toowoomba race meetings from Sky Racing 1 to the broadcaster's secondary channel, which had hit wagering revenue hard. 'You could say the wagering is only half (when on Sky Racing 2) so I think Racing Queensland has been looking forward to us getting back on Sky Racing 1 too,' he said. Sheather said the lights were fixed soon after the March blackout but industry participants such as the Queensland Racing Integrity Commission and the Australian Jockeys' Association wanted to ensure the electrical system was ultra reliable. 'The last three months that's what Racing Queensland and the (Toowoomba) club have been doing – investing in the infrastructure to make sure it is reliable,' he said. 'We've got a few other plans to make the lights are more reliable and reduce any risk, which were identified as part of the engineer's report, but that's something the club will do internally.' Sheather did not wish to divulge Toowoomba Turf Club's financial loss over the past three months or the cost of the light infrastructure upgrade but said both were 'significant'. He said Racing Queensland had helped fund a new synthetic crossing that would be used for the first time on Friday night. Toowoomba was the first racing club to host meetings under lights in 1992.

News.com.au
an hour ago
- News.com.au
Every NRL club will have an NRLW team in the future as the league's administration makes big plans
The NRL is planning for all clubs – including the incoming teams in Perth and PNG – to have sides in the NRL and NRLW in the coming years. The women's competition has expanded to 12 teams this season, with the Warriors returning to the league alongside the Bulldogs who will play their first game against Newcastle on Friday night. There are still five NRL clubs that don't have a team in the NRLW yet – the Storm, Panthers, Dolphins, Sea Eagles and Rabbitohs – but chief executive Andrew Abdo remains confident they will eventually join in the not-too-distant future. 'We're in dialogue with all the clubs that don't currently have a licence around a number of factors – their investment into pathways and grassroots football in their geographical regions, high-performance facilities, centres of excellence and their plans and strategy and stadium as well,' Abdo said at the season launch in Sydney. 'How they're planning a strategy for growth and how that fits in with our overall plan. 'We're all aligned around the vision of ultimately having each team housing both a men's and women's team and we're in dialogue with each club on a bespoke strategy for that.' Expansion isn't as simple as bringing in more teams given the game doesn't want to rush things and risk thinning the talent pool too quickly. Record participation numbers mean growth will occur naturally, while there's clearly a thirst for more footy given the record TV ratings and crowd figures for this year's women's State of Origin series. 'It's a key strategic question and it's one that we're working on with everyone in the system – the clubs, the players association (and others),' Abdo said. 'The commission is really focused on growing the women's game, but that growth doesn't necessarily mean just more teams. 'It's making sure that we have an increase in talent, and it's also the type of competition that we run and the length of that competition. 'That's multiple factors, so it's not just the number of teams.' Meanwhile, Abdo says he's not concerned by the Rugby League Players Association's stance on the ARL Commission's proposed new powers that allow them to now charge players for on-field offences. An RLPA statement earlier this month said it had 'serious concerns' with the decision to amend the judiciary code that gives the ARLC 'absolute discretion and extraordinary powers' to charge players. It has now reportedly filed a formal dispute on the grounds that it wasn't properly consulted about the mid-season change. 'They're entitled to say what they want to say,' Abdo said. 'They've made their representations both publicly and to us, so we'll consider those and meet with them to try to continue the dialogue in a positive and constructive manner. 'We're not concerned (because) we feel like we followed due process, but we'll sit down and talk through it. 'I think it's an insurance policy in rare circumstances where the commission might feel that the policy hasn't been properly applied.'

ABC News
an hour ago
- ABC News
Optus Sport customers to receive discounts after transfer of Premier League broadcast rights to Stan
Existing Optus Sport customers are set to receive discounted pricing to watch the English Premier League after the transfer of broadcast rights to Stan. Nine's Stan Sport streaming service will begin airing the football content from August 1, the date when Optus Sport shuts down, ending a nine-year run. The new Premier League season kicks off on August 16. It is yet to be determined whether any football content will be broadcast on Nine's free to air channels at this stage. Stan is paying Optus Sport an up-front fee of $20 million and making a contribution toward the first payment for the next Premier League rights cycles. The agreement also includes the rights to FA Cup games, Japan's and the US National Women's Soccer League. "The Premier League is the most-watched football league on the planet, and alongside the FA Cup, this acquisition reinforces Nine's position as the home of sport in Australia," Nine CEO Matt Stanton said in a statement. "We are proud to deliver these iconic competitions to Australian audiences through Stan Sport." Under the agreement, Optus Sport customers who remain Optus telecommunications customers will be provided discounted pricing from Stan. Existing customers will receive detailed information and special offers in coming days to ensure the transition to Stan is as simple as possible. Optus CEO Stephen Rue said the decision to transfer the Premier League broadcast rights comes as the company shifts its focus to Optus's core operations in telecommunications, its commitment to customers, and unlocking further value for the business in its future. "Optus Sport has delivered outstanding sports broadcasting to Australian football lovers for almost a decade," Rue said in a statement. "One of our key priorities was to find a home for Optus Sport content which would take the game forward and enable all Optus Sport subscribers to continue to receive uninterrupted access to all their favourite football action. "Optus Sport customers and the game of football will be in great hands at Stan, and we know the game will receive the broadcasting priority it deserves from an organisation whose speciality is delivering quality sports programming to its customers." Existing Optus Sport customers will still be able access the broadcast of the UEFA Women's Euro 2025 tournament, which commences on July 3. ABC/AAP