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Hiker rescued from chest-deep snow on Mount Washington describes harrowing moment: ‘Is this really happening to us?'
Hiker rescued from chest-deep snow on Mount Washington describes harrowing moment: ‘Is this really happening to us?'

Boston Globe

time06-02-2025

  • Climate
  • Boston Globe

Hiker rescued from chest-deep snow on Mount Washington describes harrowing moment: ‘Is this really happening to us?'

But about an hour after sunset on Sunday, they were snowed in 5,000 feet up the mountain and calling 911 in fear for their life. 'We thought 'Is this really happening to us?'' McKee said. For nearly eight hours, McKee, 51, and her partner, Beata Lelacheur, 54, huddled in the darkness, waiting for a search team to make its way through subzero temperatures and sustained winds of 50 to 60 miles per hour. Get N.H. Morning Report A weekday newsletter delivering the N.H. news you need to know right to your inbox. Enter Email Sign Up After a brief stint in the hospital, McKee returned to her Southborough home. Three days after her rescue, she said she still has no feeling in four of her fingers. She also knows it could have been much worse. Advertisement 'It was touch-and-go for a bit there,' she said in an interview Wednesday. McKee considers herself an experienced hiker. She is a member of the Worcester chapter of the Appalachian Mountain Club and has attended countless trainings on high-altitude backpacking and cold weather safety protocols. 'We see the press releases of other hikers being rescued,' she said. 'But we try to be prepared.' But their harrowing experience showed them that plans can quickly go awry in Mount Washington's forbidding climate. Related : 'We just spent so much time trying to find our way that it got dark,' she said. 'That's when conditions get scary, because you can't see. Everything looks like a carrot or stick and you're not sure which is which.' The pair set out on Jewell Trail around 7 a.m., for a hike of roughly 13 miles to up nearby Mount Jefferson and Mount Monroe. Aside from an afternoon breeze, it was a 'bluebird day,' McKee said. 'Everyone who hikes above tree line is used to breeze, that's not a problem at all,' she said. 'It was just later when that the winds picked up and the snow came and it was dark. So it was only after sunset that the conditions worsened.' Advertisement Kathryn McKee and a hiking partner were on Jewell Trail in New Hampshire when they lost the trail on Mount Washington, forcing an overnight rescue effort. Kathryn McKee At 5:23 p.m. — in the fading light about a half-hour after sunset — she sent her husband a text message that they had lost the trail above the tree line, where it is only marked by stone cairns. She assured him they were 'still OK' and were on their way down. At 5:52 p.m., she texted him again: 'We may need assistance. Stand by.' from the state's fish and game department were notified shortly after 6 p.m. and contacted the hikers over the phone. Over multiple phone calls, conservation officers tried to guide the two hikers down the mountain. According to their GPS coordinates, they were only 34 feet off the trail, but they were unable to follow it for long because it had been blown over by wind and snow. So they fought their way through the harsh weather and precarious 'spruce traps,' holes in the snow underneath trees. 'When you fall in those spruce traps, there's other little spruce limbs and all sorts of things that can pierce you,' she said. 'They pierce your head, they can pierce your leg. So if we had an injury like that up there, we would have definitely not made it. We wouldn't have been able to care for ourselves, even with our first aid items, because of those conditions.' As the conditions worsened, they realized they had a choice: wait for rescue or keep moving and potentially die trying, McKee said. Advertisement 'We were like, 'I don't think this is safe to continue,'' she said. 'And it's not safe to drag people out to save you, either. But it was that moment of difficulty — we had to make a decision.' Around 8:30 p.m., the two huddled in the snow to keep warm, and made the hard decision to ask wildlife officials to send help. 'It was difficult to accept,' she said. 'If we call [for rescue], we are putting people at risk.' While rescuers prepared to ascend the mountain, McKee and Lelacheur hunkered down. They broke out emergency full-body weather bags and other gear to keep them warm. Hiking safety tips that could save your life Share WATCH: Associate Ideas editor and wilderness first responder Christine Mehta unpacks what adventurers need to know before hitting the trails. ( undefined ) But McKee said the two quickly lost dexterity in their fingers, which made any sort of adjustment extremely difficult. 'I couldn't open the first aid kit,' she said. 'I couldn't find the emergency blanket. It was there [in my pack], I just couldn't find it.' Half-buried in the snow, they wiggled their fingers and toes to stay warm, and tried to keep each other focused and alert. It wasn't easy to keep the situation light, either. 'I tried to ask [Beata] where she wanted to go, if she could go anywhere' McKee said. 'I don't think she was interested in having that conversation at that moment.' Rescue crews found the hikers shortly before 2 a.m., nearly three hours after beginning an ascent of the mountain and more than five hours after the hikers called for rescue. Both were suffering from 'cold-weather injuries,' wildlife officials said, and McKee was taken to Littleton Regional Hospital for treatment. Three days later, McKee said she is still suffering from the frostbite in her fingers, as well as her wrist and lower back. Advertisement But that is 'minimal, compared to what could have happened,' she said. Wildlife officials said that, even with McKee and Lelacheur's preparation and winter hiking experience, 'unforeseen conditions' made the situation life-threatening. 'Had they not had the amount of gear that they had with them, it is unlikely that they would have survived,' Sergeant Matthew Holmes, a spokesperson for the New Hampshire Fish and Game Department, said in a statement. McKee agreed and said she and her partner were extremely grateful for the efforts of rescuers. 'I can't say enough for them,' she said. 'They put their lives at risk to save ours.' She said the harsh experience only underscored the fact that, as important as preparedness is, it's not a guarantee of safety. 'Don't just be an ego-driven person that thinks they can conquer anything,' she said. 'I consider myself a strong person. But I couldn't will my fingers to move [up there]. It's not about willpower.' A view of the White Mountains from Mount Jefferson. Two hikers were rescued from nearby Mount Washington after losing the trail in windswept conditions Kathryn McKee Camilo Fonseca can be reached at

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