Uncategorized

Dangerous trail leaves hikers stranded overnight on Maine’s highest mountain

Four hikers were rescued in Maine after they were stranded while hiking on Knife Trail, according to Baxter State Park officials who spoke with knowledge on the rescue.

Four hikers were rescued on Friday in Maine on Maine’s tallest mountain, according to officials.

Baxter State Park officials in Maine said the two groups of hikers got stranded on Thursday night after dark while on Knife Edge trail on Mount Katahdin, which reaches a maximum height of over 5,000 ft.

One of the hikers was a female in her 30’s and had an “unstable knee injury,” but the three other hikers weren’t injured.


“This incident started Thursday night after dark and appears to involve two different hiking parties that became stranded on the Knife Edge. One of the hikers, a female who is in her 30’s, has sustained an unstable knee injury. The other three hikers are not injured,” the state park wrote.

FIVE HELICOPTERS NEEDED TO SAVE INJURED SOLO CLIMBER ON CALIFORNIA’S SECOND-HIGHEST PEAK

Park rangers provided the hikers with food and other supplies on Friday morning while waiting for a Maine Forest Service helicopter to make the rescue. 

The Maine Forest Service helicopter made several attempts to rescue the hikers, but low clouds blocked them, according to News Center Maine. A Blackhawk helicopter crew eventually rescued the hikers.

By late Friday afternoon, all hikers were rescued.

HIKER’S WILDERNESS ADVENTURE ENDS IN TRAGEDY AT POPULAR PARK DESTINATION

Two people were found dead while hiking on Mount Katahdin in early June. 

Tim Keiderling, 58, and his daughter, Esther, 28, were found dead after the two went on a hiking trip.

See also  Lena Dunham’s ‘Girls’ follow-up ‘Too Much’ and the middle-aged millennial
Share this article:
Share on Facebook
Facebook
Tweet about this on Twitter
Twitter