Jul 4, 2000 – Cheat

Report ID#85757

2000-07-04
accident date
Star Mitchell
victim
63
victim age
Cheat
river
Canyon
section
Pete Morgan
location
n/a
gage
Medium
water level
IV
river difficulty
Impact/Trauma
cause code(s)
Spinal Injury
injury type(s)
Other
factors
Private
trip type
Whitewater Kayak
boat type
status?
status

Description

Forwarded from Lauras husband… Danger Rapidly Approaching By Angus Phillips Tuesday , July 11, 2000 Washington is a great place for whitewater paddling, with one of the biggest canoe clubs in the nation, the Canoe Cruisers Association, and the Potomac, widely considered the finest urban wilderness river in the world. Every weekend from March to November, local boaters fan out for trips on fast water from West Virginia to Pennsylvania and beyond. Mostly they come home tired and refreshed, but trouble can strike quickly on a river and can be calamitous. “I have four screws in my head,” Star Mitchell said yesterday from her home in Montgomery County, where she is recovering after breaking her neck on West Virginias Cheat River, “and a contraption to hold my head still thats attached to a bulletproof vest. Listen. I heard a hollow sound. Thats me tapping on my chest.” Mitchell, 63, a retired public school teacher, wont be paddling again for months. She is lucky to be alive after flipping and smacking a rock head-on in a tumultuous Class IV rapids July 4 weekend. She is fortunate in the company she keeps. She was boating that day with Jeff Davis, CCA safety chairman and a professional carpenter. He had the tools and experience to fashion a brace of flotation foam to stabilize her neck, and was skilled enough to paddle her out as she lay immobilized in the bottom of his solo canoe. Hes a pine knot of a guy, said Mitchell. There arent too many people who can paddle three miles of Class III rapids with a dead person in the bow. Thats a strong man. Shes also lucky for the gear she had. Mitchell said her bulky, old-fashioned life jacket with flotation collar kept her head up out of the water after the accident and an oversized helmet probably minimized damage from the knock. Like most river accidents, it happened fast. Wed had a good run, said Mitchell. Pete Morgan Rapids is the last Level IV before the takeout. I went too far right, flipped and hit my head. I was going really fast. It put a front tooth right through my lip, but I was never knocked out. I came out of the boat and got shoved into an eddy. The current was trying to push me under an undercut rock. One guy tried to get me, but I couldnt reach the grab loop on his kayak. Then Jeff threw me a rope and they pulled me out. Mitchell lay on the rocks, afraid to move, while a gathering of paddlers considered what to do. Davis was the only one with an open boat capable of carrying her. He also had a small saw for cutting tree limbs. A kayaker volunteered flotation foam from his boat to build a stabilizing brace. Davis cut it to fit and secured it under her life jacket with an Ace bandage and the duct tape experienced paddlers carry to mend shattered boats. He carefully lay Mitchell down in the bottom of his canoe. They whacked into rocks and took on gallons of water forging through rapids to the takeout. It was touch-and-go, said Mitchell. I thought for sure we were going to capsize. She was at Ruby Memorial Hospital in Morgantown by 9 p.m., where X-rays showed a broken top vertebra. Doctors told her such breaks usually result in paralysis or death. As it is, shell be in a body cast three months and expects to be stiff as a board and weak as a kitten when it is removed. Shell paddle again, said Mitchell, but its making me consider if Ill do Class IV rapids again. Canoe Cruisers Association runs paddling classes all summer, including: ? Introduction to paddling on the C&O Canal from 6:30 to 8 p.m. Tuesdays at Fletchers Boathouse in the District and Thursdays at Swains Lock in Potomac. Call Ed Pilchard, 301-434-4007. ? Canoeing basics for lakes and rivers, last session is Aug. 17, 19, 20 & 26, call Michael Hoon, 301-589-7533. ? Beginning whitewater canoe, last session is Aug. 16, 19, 20 & 26. Call Bob Kimmel, 703-281-1428. ? Beginning whitewater kayak, last session is Aug. 2, 5-6 p.m.; call Katie Abbruzzese, 703-536-0305. 2000 The Washington Post Company