Couldn't agree more. November 2002. Elk hunting near the border of Banff National Park in Alberta. Get up early and ride in the dark to get up high so we decided to take the short cut on a horse trail across a skree slide area. in the dark the horse i was riding stepped off the trail dropping down about 6-8 feet, then in her panic she decided to try and jump back up on the trail and we went over backwards, in the dark, and I stayed in the saddle for at least two revolutions, being crushed by the horse and sable horn before i was thrown clear. I flailed down about 100 yards at a 45 degree angle before cashing into the poplars at the bottom, when again the mare rolled over me one more time. I laid there for a couple of hours before my brother in law arrived with the team and wagon, my youngest son rode back to camp. My other son went to the highest ridge to call out for medical aid and the other hunter stayed with me for reassurance and support. He was riding right behind he when the accident happened and raced on foot down the slope, he witnessed it all and his first thought was that I was dead. He told me that the most beautiful words he had ever heard were when I uttered "F**k this really hurts". Next problem, How do they get me into the wagon with five foot sides. Well they rolled a stump up to the wagons wheel, and I pulled myself in and laid down on the flat floor for the two hour trip to the Panther River crossing where we were hoping to meet the Ambulance as no motorized vehicle were permitted into the area we were at, still not knowing if they would be there. Little did I know, my son managed to get out with the MIKE radio, the call was intercepted by STARS (Shock Trauma Air Rescue) in Calgary and they dispatched a helicopter for my extraction. But how did they find me? They were given a general location from my son with the MIKE phone and flew to there location where my sons (they had gotten back together on the ridge) pointed the general area where we were with the team and wagon but we weren't really visible because of all the spruce and pine trees covering the trail. When they flew over us it was truly the sound of Angel Wings, except the brother in law then say " I think I know where they are going to land, we better speed up" and he put the team and wagon into a canter, two rocky river crossings and a couple of miles later we arrived at he clearing where they had landed. Shaken, not stirred. I was airlifted into Foothills Hospital in Calgary and admitted into emergency. Cracked sternum, both shoulders separated with torn ligaments, four cracked ribs, bruised spine and hips, but alive and still feisty (well a little anyways).I think that the doctors were worried about internal organ failures. As the paramedic team was cutting my clothes off on route to the hospital I asked them not to cut off my hunting boots as this was the first time I had worn them. The flight navigator asked me " What size are they? I responded 10 & 1/2 double E, to which he replied, if you die, can I have them?" just a little morbid humour. Four days in Emerge then discharged while awaiting surgeries (both shoulders).
A few comments to make.
Emergency Staff at the Foothills Hospital were fantastic.
STARS is a NGO, funded by private companies and communities in Alberta, they will come to get you at no cost, no matter race, colour or any other affiliation, and are the one charitable organization that I support religiously. At the time of my extraction, it was the most remote that they had ever performed.
Its not if you may have an accident hunting on horseback in the mountains, its when.
I carried my MIKE phone with me because I had every intention of calling my wife when we reached the high slopes, as it was our 20th wedding anniversary. She told me that even after 20 years of marriage, you can still make my heart race.
The horse only suffered a dislocated hip
No elk were injured and no tags were filled.