Climber rescued after being pinned under 16,000-pound boulder

The boulder fell during a minor rockslide, and a large crowd of bystanders tried to help, but the boulder could not be moved.

WPDE

@ai6yr The article briefly mentions they built a field rig to lift/shift the boulder. As someone interested in engineering, I'd be curious. The photo suggests that maybe they wrapped it in a webbing, then pulled it off of him, perhaps with a winch.

That's the kind of object where if the other end of the winch is something like one of those fire trucks, you might drag the truck along the gravel more than move the boulder, even with the parking brake set on every wheel.

@scottmiller42 @ai6yr
They've got better photos and videos at https://www.facebook.com/clackamasfire/posts/pfbid02RxUmxLowEdg2hoVNWWrKtz9Mr5XxtgecEgJuFsHkdLSZbdZgNNGxumhTP3KgZNHnl

Looks like they squeezed in one wooden wedge at a time until they could get the patient out from under it. So just winching an inch at a time, and making sure it couldn't drop back down to the starting position.

Clackamas Fire

On Sunday, May 24, 2026, at approximately 10:20am, Clackamas Fire’s Technical Rescue Team responded to a mutual aid request from Hoodland Fire to assist with the rescue of an injured climber. Squad...

@me_valentijn @scottmiller42 @ai6yr It's more than just lifting the weight without risk of it falling back down...as the weight is removed, you have to be looking out for bleeding. With crush injuries the weight is often all that's keeping the blood on the inside.

I know several of you are pros at this; I only had one day-long course in lifting heavy objects off of trapped people, focusing on tilt-up construction, not boulders. I'm open to corrections!

@W6KME @scottmiller42 @ai6yr
Yeah, they have the patient blurred, but you can see an arm and a blood pressure cuff in various images. Wouldn't be surprised if there was other equipment in the blur as well.

@me_valentijn @scottmiller42 @ai6yr

My one day was a disaster also...group of four trainees. When I was getting my turns with the dummy under the slabs, the other three were supposed to be managing the lifting and cribbing, and they weren't. So I was yelling orders at them while trying to pass the class while also trying to avoid being crushed by these morons as they repeatedly dropped the slab.

Teamwork is a lot of fun, really.

@W6KME @me_valentijn @scottmiller42 @ai6yr lift an inch crib an inch
Going up and coming down
@MsMerope @me_valentijn @scottmiller42 @ai6yr It should be easy, right? But some people simply can't understand working together.

@W6KME @MsMerope @me_valentijn @ai6yr I’m sure field rescue is hard, and I’d be incompetent. Thinking & acting quickly under pressure is not my forte. Ruminating on a challenging problem that takes days of thought is more my thing.

That said one skill doing IT at very large company has taught me: you can’t do your own job if you are double-checking everyone else. Maybe a team lead, but in cases like this, it’s probably more down to picking the people who can be depended upon.

@scottmiller42 @MsMerope @me_valentijn @ai6yr Absolutely correct. And at least I learned that day that several coworkers were useless in an emergency. That was good to know-this was just a couple of months before the Northridge quake when we had several large facilities full of collapsed equipment and walls, all surrounded by hazmat.

@W6KME @scottmiller42 @me_valentijn @ai6yr

yeah, it's amazing how people actually react to chaos.

We've got a volunteer who can regurgitate all the medical hows, whys, and wherefores - but every time I've been at an event with them where the 🩸 hits the pavement? They freeze up.

and trauma is mostly what we deal with.

@MsMerope @W6KME @scottmiller42 @me_valentijn @ai6yr
Mom went all the way through nurses training only to discover she fainted in an operating room. She was much happier as a librarian.

@Dougfir @MsMerope @W6KME @scottmiller42 @me_valentijn @ai6yr

i was all set to go into pharmacy like my dad and grandfather until i found out you had to cut open dead animals in school.

in middle school biology, when we were supposed to dissect a worm, i brought in a note that i was a conscientious objector.

@paul_ipv6 @Dougfir @MsMerope @W6KME @scottmiller42 @me_valentijn @ai6yr At one time I seriously wanted to be a vet. But I couldn't handle the dissections, formaldehyde, etc. I still sometimes regret this.

@lauren @paul_ipv6 @Dougfir @MsMerope @W6KME @scottmiller42 @me_valentijn @ai6yr reminds me of animal tech, we were warned up front that of the student cohort there was a good chance 2-3 of us would develop a new allergy to the species we wanted to work with by the time we were qualified to do so (or by a few years into the job).

We all wore n95s to work every day (best known prevention, as the phenomenon is caused by constant daily inhalation of tiny particles) and luckily it never happened to anyone I knew. But it does happen a lot in that career

@coolandnormal @lauren @paul_ipv6 @Dougfir @MsMerope @W6KME @scottmiller42 @me_valentijn @ai6yr When I was in library school we were warned that some archival work can be a short career because people get sensitized to some of the stuff that people rave about as 'the smell of old books'. Precautions were advised, especially if you were going to be dealing with something like 200 year old municipal records that had been through a couple of floods.
@ai6yr @coolandnormal @lauren @paul_ipv6 @Dougfir @MsMerope @W6KME @scottmiller42 @me_valentijn Yup. Archival collections, especially if they were established before climate control was a thing, can be pretty bad. The floods sped up the problems but are not really required for general ickiness in books and papers that are decades old.
Even before you get into things like Victorian bindings that used arsenic dyes. Never handle a really old book with green binding with your bare hands...
@ElyseMGrasso @coolandnormal @lauren @paul_ipv6 @Dougfir @MsMerope @W6KME @scottmiller42 @me_valentijn Well, goes into the category of "brightly colored stuff from 1850 to 1940 must mean it's toxic" lol

@ai6yr @ElyseMGrasso @coolandnormal @lauren @Dougfir @MsMerope @W6KME @scottmiller42 @me_valentijn

radium! the miracle cosmetic! belladonna! makes your cheeks rosy!

there was a murder mystery (can't remember the episode) where a green book was used to kill someone due to the arsenic.

@paul_ipv6 @ai6yr @ElyseMGrasso @coolandnormal @lauren @Dougfir @MsMerope @scottmiller42 @me_valentijn I think I always assumed it was the highly popular dark hunter green that contained arsenic, but apparently, it's more like emerald.

https://sites.udel.edu/poisonbookproject/resources/arsenical-books-database/

Arsenical Books Database | Poison Book Project

Emerald green bookcloth with discolored spine. Courtesy of the Baldwin Library of Historical Children’s Literature, Special and Area Studies Collections...

@W6KME @paul_ipv6 @ai6yr @coolandnormal @lauren @Dougfir @MsMerope @scottmiller42 @me_valentijn Yup. The movie did not use quite the right shade of green, but the famous dress made out of green draperies in Gone With the Wind would have been fairly toxic (though I've seen a suggestion that arsenic green draperies, which were popular in the 19th century South helped keep down mosquitos and other vermin).
@paul_ipv6 @ElyseMGrasso @coolandnormal @lauren @Dougfir @MsMerope @W6KME @scottmiller42 @me_valentijn Yeah, we don't have a very good track record on "using random stuff we've figured out how to mine from the earth"... Asbestos? Mercury? Petroleum? I mean....