We descended a canyon in Zion’s backcountry in September and had a
near–miss when a natural anchor pulled.
Trip Participants:
Tom Jones, Kip Marshall, Larry Halford, Ron
Hudson.
Canyon:
A rarely descended canyon in the Zion backcountry,
currently considered ‘under the radar’ and therefore not named here.
The Story:
Kip had done the canyon a couple weeks earlier and was in the lead. In the middle of the canyon, there are a number of
short rappels intermixed with pools that can mostly be avoided. This
particular rappel was down a low–angle slab that rolled over into a
short drop to the edge of a pool in a narrow portion of the
canyon. The total drop was about 25 feet with the last 10 being
vertical.
When we arrived at the drop, there was a sling in place. It was
draped around some rocks stuck behind a chockstone partially buried
in the mud. To me, it looked very marginal at best, and we started
looking around for alternatives. Kip assured us that they had
rapped off it a few weeks ago and it was fine. He repositioned
things a bit, set up the rope, climbed past the anchor, and put
himself on rappel. I believe I stepped forward and put my foot on
one of the rocks to help keep the rock and sling in place. Kip
rapped to the bottom without difficulty.
Next up was Larry. He stepped past the anchor, set his butt on
the slab to hook up, and rigged his rappel setup. He gave the rope
above a small shake (as is normal), and this may have moved the
sling just slightly. Then he slid down the slab and went on
rappel. At this point, I had my foot on one of the rocks that the
sling was around.
When Larry got near the bottom, I was satisfied that the anchor was
pretty much OK and stepped to the side to pick up the big rope in
its rope bag to toss down to Kip. After I turned, I heard a whumph
sound and a yelp from below. I turned back to see the sling and
rope gone. Larry had fallen the last four feet or so and, thankfully,
was not hurt.
Analysis:
Analysis: the sling was draped over some rocks stuck behind a solid
chockstone. The sling was just barely in place over the rocks. Any
small change in the configuration would result in the sling
pulling. Perhaps Larry’s small shake of the rope before leaning
back made that small change. Perhaps the little bit of force being
applied by my foot was enough to keep the rock from rotating, and
removing my foot caused a slight shift.
1. Rappeling is a serious business and even short rappels must be
taken seriously. Any injury in this deep–in–the–backcountry place
would be very, very serious.
2. If an anchor stinks, don’t use it. I had a bad feeling about
this anchor and did not push it. I should have. After Larry
pulled the sling, Ron and I spent 5 minutes to dig the mud out
around the chockstone and establish a solid anchor.
3. If you’re going to use a stinky anchor, at least back it up
correctly for all but the last person. I should have sat down and
clipped to the sling, providing a sitting–anchor backup that would
have worked. My placing my foot on the anchor was particularly
ineffective—if the sling had started to go, I was not in a
position to catch it.
4. Going out with ‘the boys’ can be dangerous. While this was not
an overly macho crowd, why did none of us say, “Uh, let’s make a
better anchor?” Partly we were cold and moving quickly—an
example of haste makes waste. And the obvious anchor to use was to
dig the mud out from around the chockstone—an unpleasant task. We
blew it, and I know I blew it especially because I was very clear
that the anchor stank but did not insist on fixing it.
Tom
Oct 22, 2004
© 2004 Nolan Thomas Jones