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San Francisco Chronicle article on Half Dome: 7 July 2007 by Peter
Fimrite
Yosemite
National Park -- Scores of sweating hikers lugging backpacks and water
bottles hung onto the cable handrails on the slope leading to the top of
Half Dome, waiting for their turn to move.
"Let's go,
let's go, let's go!" yelled one frustrated man, but the crowd on
the cables didn't budge. It was midday on a Saturday, and the sun was
beating down on the tired hikers, who were stalled in mid-climb.
The last 400
feet of the grueling 8.6-mile climb to the summit of the world-famous
peak was like a holiday scene at a Disneyland ride -- a long line and a
few thrills.
It was typical
of a weekend summer day at the 8,842-foot top of Half Dome. Hikers
wearing tennis shoes and sandals, city kids in baggy basketball garb,
children, flabby tourists and the elderly were clambering around on the
slick granite, where three people have tumbled to their death within the
past year -- one of them just a few weeks ago.
The weekend
menagerie at the top of Half Dome is a problem that many people believe
is turning one of the world's signature hikes into a flirtation with
death. Yosemite National Park officials acknowledge that the crowds are
sometimes excessive but say there are no obvious solutions.
On this
particular Saturday, two women panicked while trying to climb the cables
and had to be helped down. A man suffering from dehydration was assisted
down by a ranger, and a frightened, sobbing young boy was being urged on
to the top by his father.
To bypass the
crowd, one young man wearing Converse All Stars high tops began pulling
himself up the 45- to 50-degree slope on the outside of the cables.
"I can't
wear boots," replied the man after someone inside the cables
questioned his sanity. "I get all clumsy in boots."
Some of the
hikers had heard of the recent deaths on Half Dome, but few appeared to
be concerned.
"Accidents
happen," said Scott Mutch, 51, of Alta Loma (San Bernardino
County), who climbed to the top with his 13-year-old son, Thomas, and 20
others in his Boy Scout troop. "You're in God's hands."
The trail to the
summit of Half Dome is perhaps the most famous and scenic day hike in
the United States. It gains 4,733 feet in elevation as it winds past two
immense waterfalls, climbs steep switchbacks and teeters along 400 rock
steps on a cliff to the backside of Half Dome. There, the final push up
slippery smooth granite awaits, with only the cable handrails to prevent
a slide into thin air.
The top of the
climb scares plenty of people off the mountain. The immense summit looms
above as hikers approach it; the people on the cables look like ants
clinging to a vertical slope.
"Oh s --
," said one hiker when he first glimpsed the dome. "You have
to climb that?"
But the crowds
keep coming. The number of weekend and holiday hikers on Half Dome has
increased 30 percent since the mid-1990s, and concerns are mounting
about frequent bottlenecks on the summit cables.
"I'm really
surprised at the amount of people and the age groups that made it
here," said Brian Floyd, 34, of Fresno as he waited at the bottom
of the cables with dozens of others. "I've seen little kids and
elderly people."
Blake Chapman of
the West Marin hamlet of Woodacre said the cables, the crowd and his
decision to wear Teva sandals instead of hiking boots had combined to
make things very difficult.
"I'll never
do this again, and I want to know whose idea it was," Chapman said
only half-jokingly as he stood gasping with his friends on the top, his
cowboy hat slightly askew. "I turned 61 yesterday, and this isn't a
gift."
Some believe the
bottleneck was at least partially responsible for the June 16 death of
Hirofumi Nohara. The 37-year-old Japanese citizen lost his footing
three-quarters of the way up the cables and slid off the side of Half
Dome in front of dozens of horrified witnesses.
There was a
45-minute wait to ascend the cables at the time, and climbers going up
and down were jostling past one another, according to witnesses.
It was the third
fatal fall from the cables within the past year, but the crowds were
clearly not a factor in the other two deaths, which occurred during
off-peak months.
On April 19,
Jennie Bettles, a 43-year-old businesswoman from Oakland, fell to her
death while trying to descend during wet weather. Emily Sandall, 25, of
New Mexico, died Nov. 10, 2006, after slipping on the wet granite. In
both cases, the handrail supports and wooden foot planks had been taken
out, and the cables were lying flat on the granite, standard practice
during the off-season.
Last October,
Scott Clancy of Fresno fell when he slipped on the wet granite and lost
his hold on the cables, but his pants caught on something before he
could plummet off the cliff, and he was saved.
The incidents
have prompted calls for Yosemite to make the cables safer, either by
regulating who goes up, requiring safety harnesses or adding a third
cable. Park officials say no significant change can be made without a
great deal of study, public hearings and evidence that spending the
money would make the climb safer.
"We've only
had the one fatality where other factors like bad weather didn't play a
part, so there's no pattern," said ranger Adrienne Freeman, a park
spokeswoman.
An average of
about 12 people die in Yosemite each year, but the three people who died
within the past year were the only ones to simply slip off the rocks at
Half Dome in decades, Freeman said. Other deaths have been blamed on
heart attacks, lightning strikes and parachute accidents.
In fact, more
people have died being swept over Vernal and Nevada falls on the Mist
Trail leading up to Half Dome. Drownings in the Merced River next to the
trail also outnumber fatal falls from the iconic hunk of rock.
Still, it takes
only one climb up the cables on a weekend to see what concerns people.
Planks are
spaced about 12 feet apart underneath the cables, and on most weekend
afternoons two people are standing on each one. The gridlock is
especially hard on the unfortunate folks stranded on the steepest
50-yard section of the route, where getting caught between planks means
holding onto the cables for dear life while trying to find a crack in
which to wedge one's feet.
This is the spot
where people regularly freeze up.
"I had
vertigo," said Shea Keane, 31, of Vacaville, who climbed the cables
with five friends. "Everything in my body was shaking. I felt like
I was going to vomit."
Jen Zuzak, 34,
of Berkeley, was so dizzy she had to sit down on one of the planks
halfway up. She made it, she said, only because others on the cables
encouraged her to continue.
Amal Mehta, 7,
of San Jose, had a stunned look as he descended from the top with help
from his father, Huzefa, and a climbing harness.
"I wasn't
scared," he said, but his father quickly shot back, "Yes you
were. I was scared."
"OK,"
Amal conceded. "A little bit."
As the logjam
increased on the cables that Saturday, so did the chatter, mostly out of
necessity as people negotiated which side to pass on while moving from
plank to plank.
At one point a
dropped water bottle bounced on the granite with a loud bop-bop. The
hillside went silent as the hikers listened to it bounce and skitter for
several hundred feet before going over a ledge into space.
"What
surprises me is the lack of concern for safety," said Alan
Henderson, a 40-year-old native of Scotland, who wore a harness and
clipped himself onto the cable using metal hooks. "There are people
up here with just tennis shoes. If you slip, you are a goner."
The colossal,
rounded backside of Half Dome is not exactly vertical, but scaling it
unaided would be impossible for anyone who is not an experienced rock
climber. The summit was considered totally inaccessible until Oct. 12,
1875, when George Anderson drilled his way to the top, fastening his
rope to iron eyebolts.
A few days
later, Sally Dutcher became the first woman to climb Half Dome, using
Anderson's fixed ropes. She was wearing a long dress, according to
historians.
In 1919, the
Sierra Club installed the steel cables. Scaling them has become almost a
rite of passage for Yosemite visitors from around the world.
Royal Robbins, a
legend among climbers and part of the team that made the first ascent of
Half Dome's 2,000-foot northwest face in 1957, once descended the back
side of the rock next to the cables without using his hands.
"One can,
if you are careful, stick to that particular surface with good
rubber," Robbins said this week of his gravity-defying feat on June
24, 1961.
It is perhaps
because of stories like that, and a general impression that scaling Half
Dome is not overly difficult, that so many people come ill-prepared for
the rigors of the climb.
There are signs
about the dangers along the trail. But there are almost always people at
the top who have run out of water, are too exhausted to continue, lack
proper footwear or are simply paralyzed with fear.
Every year,
people have to be taken out by helicopter, rescue workers say.
"We are
seeing a change in the pattern of visitor behavior up there,"
Freeman said. "What this tells us is that we have to start asking
some questions. Are more people driving to Yosemite in the morning and
trying to climb Half Dome in a day? Are people coming prepared? Are they
acclimated? Are they rushing because of time limitations?"
Next year,
Yosemite plans to start collecting data on the various impacts,
including crowding, on the Merced River corridor, which includes Half
Dome and the trail leading to it. That could lead to new policies, but
any major changes would have to be accompanied by legislation. That
could very well face opposition from environmental groups, climbers,
naturalists or wilderness advocates, Freeman said.
In the meantime,
park visitors will have to get up extremely early or endure the crowds
if they want a transcendent view from the top of Half Dome of the
cathedral of nature that is Yosemite Valley.
"I'm not
real big on heights," said Shelly Jones, a 28-year-old geography
teacher from Virginia, as she looked out wide-eyed from the peak.
"But this is about the biggest rush I've ever had."
Making the
trip
Besides good
physical condition, the day hike to Half Dome requires preparation and
equipment. Here are some tips on what to bring:
-- Water bottles
or canteens and plenty of water. Backpackers recommend bringing half a
gallon to a gallon.
-- Water
purifier pills or a water filter so you can refill empty water bottles
with stream water.
-- Lunch food,
energy bars, trail mix.
-- Gloves made
of leather or with dimples on the palms for a good grip on the summit
cables.
-- Small
first-aid kit.
-- Bandanna to
wet face in streams and soak up sweat.
-- Sunscreen and
hat.
-- Small
flashlight in case it gets dark.
-- Lightweight
hiking boots with rugged soles that will stick on granite.
-- Lightweight
windbreaker.
-- Small
backpack or waist pack to carry everything.
Deaths on
Half Dome
June 16, 2007:
Hirofumi Nohara, a 37-year-old Japanese citizen, lost his footing
three-quarters of the way up the summit cables, slid off the side of
Half Dome and tumbled 300 feet to a ledge.
April 19, 2007:
Jennie Bettles, a 43-year-old businesswoman from Oakland, fell to her
death while trying to descend during wet weather while the cables were
down.
Nov. 10, 2006:
Emily Sandall, 25, of New Mexico, slipped on the wet granite while the
cables were down, lost her grip on the cables and fell 300 feet to her
death.
June 23, 2004:
Donald Cochrane, 48, of Saratoga, was hiking down from Half Dome on the
rock steps when he complained of chest pain and fell, tumbling 300 feet
on granite slabs to his death.
Aug. 29, 1995:
Michael Gerde, 57, of Huntington Beach (Orange County), collapsed of
heart failure while ascending the cables, lost his grip and fell.
Oct. 23, 1988:
Mitchell Reno, 35, of Antioch, base-jumped off the top of Half Dome, but
his parachute did not open until a split second before he hit, 2,000
feet below.
July 27, 1985:
Brian Jordan, 16, of Hayward, and Robert Frith, 25, of Mountain View,
and two others were struck by lightning as they sought shelter from a
sudden storm on the summit. Jordan was killed instantly, but Frith, who
was hit in the forehead, went into convulsions and rolled off the
summit, falling 1,800 feet.
Aug. 4, 1982:
James Tyler, 35, a professional stunt parachutist from La Puente (Los
Angeles County), jumped from the top of Half Dome, but his parachute
cartwheeled, slamming him repeatedly into the cliff face before his
canopy caught on a ledge and folded, sending him plummeting 600 feet to
the talus.
Aug. 27, 1972:
Edward Willems, 19, of Greenbrae, sought cover from the rain under an
overhanging rock on the summit of Half Dome and was struck by lightning.
Sept. 15, 1948:
Paul Garinger, 41, of Burlingame, toppled 1,000 feet while trying to
descend the cables.
July 9, 1948:
Chalmers Groff, 19, of Washington, D.C., slipped while trying to climb
down mossy rocks below the face of Half Dome.
Most of
information from "Off the Wall: Death in Yosemite," by Michael
Ghiglieri and Charles Farabee Jr.
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