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The Hindu
The Hindu
National
PTI

Indian-origin teen climber from Canada survives fall from U.S. peak

A large lenticular cloud, created by high winds, caps Mount Hood as seen from the Timberline Lodge in Government Camp, Oregon, U.S. (Source: AP)

A 16-year-old Indian-origin mountain climber from Canada miraculously survived a 500-feet fall from the 11,240 feet Mount Hood, the highest summit in the coastal U.S. State of Oregon, according to media reports.

Gurbaz Singh from Surrey was ascending the peak with friends on Tuesday marking his 90th mountain climb when he lost his footing on the ice and fell from a section of the mountain known as ‘The Pearly Gates’ to the ‘Devil’s Kitchen’ area below, the CNN-affiliate KATU channel reported.

Mr. Singh survived the dangerous fall, escaping only with a broken leg.

A team of search-and-rescue coordinators hiked up to the injured climber, who was stranded at an elevation of about 10,500 feet. Due to the location and elevation, the rescue operation took several hours.

Mount Hood is the highest summit in Oregon and the most visited snow-covered peak in the nation, according to the U.S. Forest Service. More than 10,000 people make the climb each year, according to officials.

“He thought he was going to stop somewhere, and he was trying to arrest the fall with his axe, but it just didn’t happen because he was rolling so fast that he couldn’t do it,” Mr. Singh’s father Rishamdeep Singh told KATU.

The teen, who underwent a surgery in a hospital in Portland, credits his training and wearing a helmet as reasons why his injuries weren’t more severe.

“We looked at my helmet afterwards and it was just destroyed. I’m so lucky”, he told CTV News.

Rescuers located Mr. Singh and managed to splint his leg. They then began the slow descent down the mountain, four hours after his initial fall.

His father said once Mr. Singh is fully healed, both of them plan to go back to Mount Hood and conquer the climb together.

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