{"id":53374,"date":"2019-09-23T11:40:00","date_gmt":"2019-09-23T19:40:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/news\/hiker-stranded-on-ledge-for-26-hours-shares-his-story\/"},"modified":"2019-09-25T14:42:27","modified_gmt":"2019-09-25T22:42:27","slug":"hiker-stranded-on-ledge-for-26-hours-shares-his-story","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/news\/hiker-stranded-on-ledge-for-26-hours-shares-his-story\/","title":{"rendered":"Hiker stranded on ledge for 26 hours shares his story"},"content":{"rendered":"
He spent 26 hours on the side of Mount Roberts<\/a> with only a raincoat to shield him from the wind and rain.<\/p>\n New Yorker Andrew Tse took a wrong turn while hiking in Juneau Thursday, slipped on a rock and slid down the mountainside before landing on a small ledge with barely any room to stand. But he also wasn’t able to get himself back to the trail.<\/p>\n Talking to the Empire from his room at Bartlett Regional Hospital, the 26-year-old cruise ship worker for Celebrity Cruise lines recalled his story of being rescued.<\/p>\n He wasn’t badly hurt, “no broken bones, thank God, only a couple of scratches,” he said.<\/p>\n He said had taken the Mount Roberts Tramway up to the trail around 3:30 p.m. Thursday, but going back down, he said he got lost and then stuck when he slid down the mountain.<\/p>\n He called a colleague who informed the cruise ship staff, who in turn called 911. However, due to the stormy weather that day, rescue crews weren’t immediately able to get him off the mountain.<\/p>\n “Unfortunately, the weather conditions were unfavorable,” Tse said. “It was foggy, windy, cold, raining … everything. I had nothing but a raincoat to keep me warm.”<\/p>\n A number of agencies were called in to assist with the rescue. The effort was coordinated by the Alaska State Troopers and involved Juneau Mountain Rescue, Sitka Mountain Rescue, Alaska SEADOGS, the National Weather Service, U.S. Coast Guard, Capital City\/Fire Rescue and the Red Cross.<\/p>\n At one point, a Coast Guard helicopter was called in but because of 80-mile-an-hour winds was not able to help. According to a dispatch from the Alaska State Troopers<\/a>, Tse was able to provide his GPS location using his cellphone. He was located in the area of Snowslide Creek, west of Gastineau Peak at an elevation of about 2,700 feet.<\/p>\n According to Jackie Ebert with Juneau Mountain Rescue, Tse was located about 500 feet below the trail about a mile from the tram.<\/p>\n “There wasn’t much room at all,” Tse said, referring to the ledge. “I stayed up the whole night. Literally my focus was not to fall any further down. The majority of my time at night was making sure I didn’t move too much.”<\/p>\n