
Archive image: The Idaho Army National Guard’s State Aviation Group UH-60L Black Hawk helicopter and the Boise Fire Department’s Swiftwater/Dive Team partnered up for hoist rescue training at Gowen Field to be trained and ready for the call.
The training is designed to allow the Swiftwater/Dive Rescue Team to become familiar with an aircraft’s hoist while wearing their river rescue gear.
Firefighters trained on both the UH-60L Black Hawk and the UH-72A Lakota.
U.S. National Guard photo by Master Sgt. Becky Vanshur.
Story by Maj. Robert Taylor, Idaho Army National Guard
For the second time in five days, the Idaho Army National Guard’s State Aviation Group assisted Custer County Search and Rescue with the rescue and transportation of an injured hiker from Idaho’s Sawtooth Mountain Range.
On July 10, a UH-60L Black Hawk flight crew from Det. 1, Company G, 1st of the 168th Aviation Regiment transported an injured hiker near Lowman, Idaho, to Smiley Creek, where the patient was transferred to an Air St. Luke’s helicopter for further treatment.
On July 6, a different Idaho Guard UH-60 Black Hawk flight crew from the same unit assisted Custer County Search and Rescue with the rescue of an injured hiker near Thompson Peak, the mountain range’s highest point.
“Small rural counties have limited resources, so the response of Idaho Army National Guard helicopters for rescue operations in our rural, remote areas is crucial to life-saving and recovery efforts,” said Custer County Sheriff Levi Maydole.
On July 10, the Idaho Guard UH-60L Black Hawk rescue flight crew flew to the mountain range, located the individual and transported him to an exchange site with a waiting civilian helicopter in approximately 20 minutes. The hiker had been reported as being in and out of consciousness, urinating blood and not being mobile. Using the UH-60L’s hoist, a medic, Sgt. Jake Brown, was lowered to the patient, who was conscious at the time. Brown and the patient were then hoisted back into the aircraft for transportation.
The flight crew consisted of pilots Chief Warrant Officer 3 Kyle Pearl and Chief Warrant Officer 2 Wes Kania; crew chief Sgt Brad Stock; and flight medics Sgt. 1st Class Jared Gilstad and Brown. Gilstad also participated in the July 6 rescue.
“We train a lot as a unit for these missions,” said Brown, who serves part-time in the National Guard while also working as a flight nurse for Life Flight Network. “It’s really rewarding to actually go out and do it for real.”
The Idaho Army National Guard’s UH-60L Black Hawks and UH-72 Lakotas both operate with hoists, which are among the only hoist assets in the state. The hoists, combined with the aircraft’s capabilities and the experience of the State Aviation Group’s pilots and medics make the Idaho Army National Guard an extremely capable partner in times of emergencies.
“The benefit for Idaho is that there are multiple assets that officials can pick from depending on the conditions presented,” said Col. Granger Amthor, Idaho Army National Guard State Aviation Group commander. “Local emergency medical services’ helicopters conduct 90 percent of rescue missions. The Idaho Army National Guard is there when the complexity is so great that we can use military assets to affect a positive outcome.”
Amthor said that altitude, heat and weight play a factor when agencies request support from the Idaho Army National Guard. The UH-60L Black Hawk can operate at the high altitudes found in Idaho’s wildness under extreme heat conditions while also carrying additional critical rescue assets, such a ropes rescue team or additional medical personal depending on the mission.
During the July 6 rescue, the flight crew transported the Custer County Search and Rescue’s ropes rescue team to a position on a mountain where the team could move an injured hiker to a location more suitable for recovery.
“We are incredibly proud of the skill and professionalism our Soldiers displayed during these rescues,” said Maj. Gen. Tim Donnellan, adjutant general of Idaho and commander, Idaho National Guard. “There is no better example to show why The National Guard is critical to the United States and the Department of Defense. The training our Soldiers and Airmen receive and the skills they develop to fight and win our nation’s wars prepare us to assist with the most difficult challenges we face at home.»
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