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Kirtland Air Force Base deploys helicopter to help rescue Taos County teen who fell in Rio Grande Gorge

Sheriff: 'They were unprepared, and fortunately, Taos County had the resources available to be able to successfully save their lives'

Taos County Fire and Rescue personnel help load a teenager onto a U.S. Air Force helicopter after he suffered serious injuries descending into the Rio Grande Gorge Monday evening.
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TAOS 鈥 The Taos County Sheriff鈥檚 Office coordinated a multiagency rescue effort Monday evening for two local teenagers who became stranded in the Rio Grande Gorge after one of them suffered serious injuries in a fall near the river鈥檚 edge.

Sheriff Steve Miera said he and his deputies responded to a 911 call from a third teen, who had hiked out of the several-hundred foot canyon to report that his friend had fallen roughly 15 feet and couldn鈥檛 move. The second teen, he said, stayed behind to help the friend who had fallen.

The Taos County teens, males ages 18, 16, and 17, were wearing light windbreaker jackets and lacked cold weather gear, raising concerns among first responders that the two teens still below could be subject to hypothermia.

Kirtland Air Force Base deployed a HH-60W helicopter designed for rescue Monday evening to airlift a teen to safety after he fell and suffered serious injuries in the Rio Grande Gorge.

While first responders have performed rescues from the river in the past, Miera said the teen who called for help indicated his friend may have suffered pelvic and spinal injuries, requiring a helicopter to extract him safely from the Gorge.

Deputies deployed a drone with night vision and thermal capabilities, in conjunction with a Classic Air Medical helicopter, to locate the two teens in the canyon roughly a mile south of the Rio Grande Gorge Bridge, upriver of a set of treacherous Class 3 rapids known locally as the 鈥淏ox.鈥

鈥淏ased on the information that we received, the injured male that was at the bottom had suffered a pelvic injury, and potentially more than that,鈥 Miera said. 鈥淪o launching a raft was an absolute last, last resort.鈥 

The sheriff鈥檚 office, in coordination with Taos Central Dispatch, asked for assistance from Kirtland U.S. Air Force Base, whose teams deployed a HH-60W helicopter and flew to the Gorge, airlifting the two teens to the canyon rim, roughly 600 feet above.

The teen who fell was transported by ambulance to Holy Cross Medical Center, and was then airlifted to the University of New Mexico Hospital in sa国际传媒官网网页入口.

Taos Fire Department, Taos County Fire and Rescue and Taos Search and Rescue also assisted in the rescue effort, which concluded around 2 a.m. Tuesday, Miera said.

The Taos County Sheriff's Office worked with other first responder agencies Monday evening to use a drone equipped with thermal and night vision capabilities to spot two teens stranded in the Rio Grande Gorge Monday evening. The teens can be seen around the middle of the image.

鈥淚 would say this was a situation where some young individuals bit off more than they could chew,鈥 the sheriff said. 鈥淭hey were unprepared, and fortunately, Taos County had the resources available to be able to successfully save their lives.鈥

The Gorge, a central feature of the federally designated Rio Grande del Norte National Monument, has been the site of numerous accidents and rescues over the years, including a California man who became stranded while hiking to hot springs there this fall.

The Rio Grande Gorge Bridge has also become the subject of an $8 million NMDOT project to build higher railings and replace sidewalks with lightweight materials in response to a spike in suicides there last year. The project is set to begin this summer.

John Miller is the sa国际传媒官网网页入口鈥檚 northern New Mexico correspondent. He can be reached at jmiller@abqjournal.com.