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News Every Day |

ACC Safety Bulletin: Rock Rescue Tips

Efficient Rescue Skills Require Practice

By the ACC Safety Committee

You’re halfway up a climb when your partner yells that their belay device is jammed. Or maybe you’re rappelling and your rope gets stuck. Or a climber drops the rope while converting an anchor. These situations are rare, but when they happen, knowing a few partner and self-rescue skills can make the difference between a stressful afternoon and a serious incident.

As the saying goes, an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure. Prevention is always the best strategy, but climbing can be dangerous. Mistakes can happen, and practicing basic rescue skills can improve how you handle stressful situations when they arise.

Why Rescue Skills Matter

1. You and your partner are the first responders

Due to the nature of climbing, crags and routes are often in remote areas where outside help may take hours to arrive. Often, your climbing partner is the only person immediately available to help. Rescue teams may eventually assist, but your ability to stabilize the situation can make a difference.

2. Many climbing problems are technical, not medical

A surprising number of “rescues” aren’t injuries. They’re technical problems with a rope or system, such as a jammed belay device, a knot stuck in the system, a climber stranded mid-pitch, a rope that won’t move, and anchors that can’t be lowered on. Knowing how to solve these problems safely can prevent a minor issue from escalating.

3. Rescue skills improve everyday climbing safety

Learning rescue techniques deepens your understanding of anchors, load transfer, rope systems, redundancy, and backups. This knowledge improves overall decision-making and risk management on every climb.

Efficient Rescue Skills Require Practice

Learning and rehearsing rescue skills is often overlooked, but it makes for a great rainy-day activity! Mastering partner and self-rescue skills requires appropriate training, as well as regular practice under controlled conditions. These techniques should be able to address entrapments, minor injuries, and technical problems.

A good rule of thumb: when faced with a rescue scenario, start with the simplest strategies and let gravity do the work.

Before You Leave

No one wants to be in a scenario where they need to perform a rescue, but keeping a few things in mind can help in the event one is needed:

  1. Know your partner and their skill level, and keep it in mind when selecting your climbs.
  2. Carry an emergency communication device. Severe injuries require professional intervention.
  3. Carry a small first aid emergency kit.
  4. Know your equipment! Understand how each item can be used in a rescue. In the event of limited or damaged gear, you should be able to improvise with what you have.
  5. Learn the skills, get the practice. When something unexpected happens on a wall, stress can escalate quickly. Practicing rescue techniques helps climbers think clearly under pressure, apply simple solutions first, and avoid panic or rushed decisions.


Remember that rescues do not always go as planned. If you’re unsure where to start, consider taking a rock rescue course to learn techniques from an experienced instructor. You can also spend time reading, discussing, and practicing scenarios with partners to solidify your knowledge base.

Rescue Scenarios to Practice

Top-Roping
  • Free up your hands and escape the belay
  • Transfer your harness belay to an anchor
  • Deal with a severely damaged rope mid-climb
  • Bypass a knot through the belay
  • Free up a jammed belay mid-climb
  • Change belay devices or belayers mid-climb
  • Intervene mid-climb when the top anchor is compromised or jammed
  • Rescue a climber whose belay line is immovable or possibly damaged
Single-Pitch Leading
  • Escape the belay without a ground anchor
  • Lower an incapacitated leader when the rope is too short
  • Rescue a trapped leader mid-climb
  • Rescue a climber from the top anchors if they drop the rope during conversion to lowering
Multi-Pitch Climbing
  • Rescue an incapacitated leader mid-climb
  • Access an incapacitated rappeller from above or below
  • Descend and ascend with an incapacitated climber
  • Aid through difficulties when conditions deteriorate
  • Down-lead to escape problematic terrain
  • Down-aid severe overhangs when retreating
  • Ascend, descend, convert, and bypass knots
  • Self-belay while climbing a pitch
  • Rescue an incapacitated climber on traverse or pendulum pitches
  • Lower, haul, convert, and bypass knots when the rescue line is constantly loaded

Closing Thoughts

Climbing rarely goes exactly as planned, and even experienced climbers occasionally run into unexpected problems. Having a basic understanding of partner and self-rescue skills can help you stay calm, think clearly, and work toward a safe solution when things don’t go smoothly. Whether it’s taking a course, practicing systems with friends, or simply talking through possible scenarios at the crag, investing a little time in these skills goes a long way. The more prepared you and your partners are, the better equipped you’ll be to handle challenges and keep your climbing days safe and enjoyable.

Get Involved

If you have an idea for future bulletins please contact safety@alpineclubofcanada.ca. You can help the club’s safety culture by reporting incidents and near misses using our reporting form. If ACC members would like support on safety issues in trip planning, please reach out and we would be happy to talk it through with you! 

 

The post ACC Safety Bulletin: Rock Rescue Tips appeared first on Alpine Club of Canada.

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