Denali National Park & Preserve (AK)
Injured Hiker Attracts Rescuers With Wildfire
During the late afternoon hours of September 5th, the park’s dispatch center received a report of a fire in the Sanctuary River drainage about 10 miles south of the park road. Coincidentally, the park's contract helicopter was in the air at the time, extracting backcountry rangers from a moose-hunting patrol on the park's north boundary. Rangers Dan Fangen-Gritis and Matt Smith diverted the ship to the reported fire location. Smoke from the fire was readily visible. As the helicopter descended for a landing, the rangers saw a man on the ground waving at them with one arm. They contacted Robert Faber, a 39-year-old resident of Toronto, Canada. Faber had taken a 20-foot fall the previous evening, lost most of his equipment, and sustained fractures to his upper arm and lower spine. He continued hiking out about 10 miles, but failed to attract attention from passing airplanes. As his strength and condition deteriorated, he started a fire on a bench of dwarf birch above the river. Faber was stabilized and evacuated and subsequently transported by air ambulance to Fairbanks. Members of the park's fire management team controlled the four-acre fire with about 40 water bucket drops. Ranger Jaime Smith was the incident commander.