Firefighters salvaged teen pitted 350 feet deep cave


Firefighters secured the girl with a harness after she was stuck while on a school field trip
https://www.sos-safety.com/

SAN ANTONIO — Emergency personnel worked through the night to rescue a teenage girl from Robber Baron Cave after she got trapped there during a school field trip Thursday afternoon.

The San Antonio Fire Department first was intimated that someone was stuck in the cave, located on the city's North Side, around 2:40 p.m., said Joe Arrington, public information officer for SAFD. By then, the 18-year-old had been cling for an hour, he said.

Firefighters succeeded evacuating the teen at 11:45 p.m. thereafter transferring her to San Antonio Military Medical Center for treatment.

She was jammed in an arena called the "Hole in the Floor" 350 feet into the cave. The area has a "narrow circular opening that you have to pass through," Arrington said. The 18-year-old, who attends Robert E. Lee High School, has not suffered any injuries, he said, adding her arms and feet are not trapped while her trunk is stuck.

She was allied to an IV meanwhile the rescue team attempted to free her, he said.
At p.m., SAFD Chief Charles Hood said firefighters cushioned the teen to help lift her out of the opening.

A twitter handle of Gene De La Cruz too reported about the brain storming task of San Antonio Fire Department prominently admiring the team.

"At this time she is conscious. She is alert. She is a trooper," Hood said at the time. "She is still in good spirits after everything that she has been through."

The firefighters worked in 30 minute shifts chiseling through the rock to free the teen.

Hood said it took about five minutes and 40 seconds to access the teen, after which they spent 20 minutes working before using another five minutes to get out.

Firefighters gradually curbed at the rock around her and even encountered tough limestone.
"We're fighting with Mother Nature right now," Hood said at the time.

In addition, Hood said opening the hole around the teen could potentially slide her down, resultantly compression of her diaphragm and make her asphyxiate.

Rescue workers secured her in a harness that keeps her immobile while they chisel at the rock.
They also placed cribbing and an air cushion beneath her to support her legs.

"As she had been in there for a while she has lost some leg strength," Hood said. "We have continued to keep her warm, to keep her fed, to monitor her vitals."

Hood said that the teen's mother hustled and bustled to traffic from Houston and was at the scene along with other family.

District 10 Councilman Clayton Perry and North East Independent School District representatives were also present.

Cave experts with the Texas Cave Management Association had been attempting to rescue her about an hour before firefighters were called, officials said.

"We'll be here for a while," Arrington said. "It's a long, drawn out process."

Needless to glorify the safety gears’ role in this mishap.




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