A NUMBER of runners taking part in this year’s annual race along the Pennine Way had to be rescued from the Cheviots after blizzard conditions blanketed the route of the ultra-marathon at the weekend.
The 268-mile event is run over a week, and this year’s winner, Catalan athlete Eugeni Rosello Sole, came in with two days to spare.
But the arctic conditions which have caused widespread disruption throughout the region over the last week resulted in the Border Search and Rescue Unit (BSARU) being called in by organisers of the event, known as the Spine Race.
The fact that the search team had to be asked for assistance came as no surprise to unit member Damon Rodwell who told TheSouthern of the conditions which greeted rescuers.
“I’d been up on the route on Thursday to meet the lead runner, a 32-year-old Spaniard, whom I had to help off the hill in a bit of a state with badly ice-damaged legs and exhaustion,” Mr Rodwell told TheSouthern this week.
“He was carrying a GPS tracker which was updating his position on the event website every few minutes, and a sharp-eyed team-mate from BSARU noticed very quickly that he’d descended from the Pennine Way a few miles too early.
“I watched his trace for the next half hour, and when I saw how slow his progress was, and that he’d unnecessarily lost several hundred metres of height, which he then had to regain, I decided to run out and meet him.
“After a 40-minute run up to Corbie Crag, I found him in a state of near-collapse, being supported by one of the race organisers. Between us we walked him off the hill to the finish, where team leader Seymour Haugh helped patch up his injuries.” But by Friday night, the weather had taken a turn for the worse, with blizzard conditions even at low level.
Competitior Dave Lee described the scene on the Pennine Way: “I’ve been going into the hills in all seasons for five decades, and I’ve seldom had to deal with anything like what we had to battle through on Friday night.
“It was dark, of course, and snowing heavily with a swirling gale blowing about our ears. It was incredibly disorientating and almost impossible to keep a track of our progress. The path was obliterated by snow, and we had drifts several feet deep to get through.”
Mr Lee was accompanied by Peruvian Annie Garcia and Russell Swift, a youngster running only his second ultra-marathon.
Mr Swift had been fitted with a GPS tracker by the event organisers, and they were fairly confident that he had made it to the refuge hut at Lamb Hill.
But they had no means of contacting him or either of his running mates, and therefore had no idea whether the group was still together, and what sort of condition they might be in.
In the circumstances, and with more severe weather forecast, it was decided to call BSARU to evacuate them.
Mr Rodwell described the operation. “We assembled 13 members and set up a control base at Pennymuir in the Kale Valley, from where the operation and communications would be handled.
“Our two Land Rovers were taken as far on to the hill as the ice and snow would allow, from where they would act as a communications relay to ensure that the hill party was in constant contact with control.
“Eight personnel were then deployed on to the hill from Buchtrig Farm, from where we made our way up to the Pennine Way.”
However, even clad in full winter gear, with ice-axes, winter boots and full waterproof body cover, the team members found it a struggle.
“Icy squalls of snow on a strong south-easterly wind combined with deep drifts to hamper our progress,” Mr Rodwell continued.
“We arrived at the hut to find all three runners safely huddled inside. They were pretty well equipped for general hill conditions, but the battering they’d endured the previous night had left them soaked to the skin, cold and exhausted.
“The fact that Mr Lee led them across some extremely bleak country in a night-time blizzard is a truly impressive example of navigation. Bear in mind that all three had covered about 250 miles over rough country in the middle of winter in the previous seven days. I take my hat off to them.
“Having warmed them up and provided dry clothing, we judged that they were in sufficiently good nick to be walked off the hill, and we escorted them back to the vehicles at Buchtrig.”
At the same time, a larger group of five competitors was holed up in the refuge hut at Auchope. As BSARU was fully committed with the Lamb Hill incident, Tweed Valley Mountain Rescue Team (TVMRT) was asked to assist.
The Tweed Valley team was engaged providing cover at the Feel the Burns race at Selkirk, but was able to send a vehicle and five members to Kirk Yetholm to ensure that this group of race entrants made its way to safety.
Two BSARU members also intercepted the runners coming off the hill at Halterburn Head while the TVMRT contingent was asked to cover the descent from the high-level alternative in case the runners had taken that route instead.
“It was a very satisfactory conclusion to what could have been a very complicated incident,” Mr Rodwell went on.
“We’re very supportive of people who decide to test themselves in the hills, as long as they equip themselves with the appropriate clothing for the conditions and the requisite knowledge and fitness for the challenge they are tackling.
“On this occasion, what could have been a tragic end to a very stern test of human endurance was prevented by a combination of appropriate use of technology, excellent hill-craft and a highly-professional and efficient operation mounted by the local search and rescue volunteers.”
On the subject of volunteers, the BSARU is recruiting and would welcome applications from anyone who feels they have something to offer.
The availability to respond to call-outs during working hours is a bonus, as is proximity to Kelso, where the unit is based.
More details of the application process can be found at www.bordersar.org.uk