Christmas Rescue in Columbia Gorge

OHSTAR team rescues dog in Columbia Gorge.
OHSTAR volunteer helps Sandy to safety.

“It never occurred to me that I would see her alive again,” said David Schelske of West Linn, whose dog plunged 150 feet down a cliff during a Christmas afternoon hike in the Columbia Gorge. The three-year-old yellow Lab, Sandy, was trapped on a narrow ledge as OHS Technical Animal Rescue team (OHSTAR) deployed to save her.

Dog Survives 150-Foot Fall

The eight-person volunteer crew arrived at the Eagle Creek trailhead at 7 pm and worked throughout the pitch black Christmas evening to bring Sandy to safety. OHSTAR volunteer John Thoeni rappelled 150 feet down a sheer cliff to locate the dog, who miraculously had suffered only minor injuries. The dog was trapped on a tiny, inaccessible ledge about 70 feet above the canyon floor.

The ledge was too small for Thoeni to climb onto, so he fitted a rescue harness on the frightened dog and the two were hoisted to safety by the other members of the rescue team. Sandy was reunited with her owner and the OHS team hiked back down the trail with the pair, arriving at the trail head at about 11:30 pm. Sandy was able to walk down the trail without assistance. “What happened was incredibly bad luck, but then we had incredibly good luck when she was saved,” said Schelske.

Earlier that day, Sandy was apparently startled by something on the trail and broke into a run that snapped her leash. Schelske saw her go around a corner on the trail, but found no sign of her until he hiked to the bottom of the cliff and spotted her stranded on an isolated ledge, unreachable without specialized climbing gear. The OHS rescue team, said Schelske, “is an amazing, dedicated group of people. I wish I could give them all a big hug.”

The treacherous Eagle Creek trail has been the site of two similar dog rescues earlier this year by the OHS rescue team.

Donate to Help Rescue Volunteers

Donate Now: Click HereOHSTAR is a skilled group of volunteers who rescue animals that are stranded or trapped and need human help to survive. They receive no tax dollars for their work, which is supported entirely by donations to OHS.

Your online donation today to OHS will help OHSTAR and the many other rescue activities supported by OHS. OHSTAR also excepts donations of needed technical climbing gear.

Rescue Video