Oregon climbing guide dies, 4 climbers injured after falls on Mt. Shasta due to unstable ice

Four climbers were injured and a climbing guide was killed Monday in three separate accidents on Mt. Shasta due to unstable ice.

The falls were reported at 8:35 a.m., 12:31 p.m. and 4 p.m. The sheriff’s office released the name of the person killed and withheld releasing the identities and ages of the four who were injured.

“We’re advising that climbers don’t summit for the next couple of days until that ice softens,” said Courtney Kreider, Siskiyou County Sheriff’s Office public information officer.

In the first incident, the sheriff’s office climbing guide Jillian Elizabeth Webster, 32, of Redmond, Oregon and two climbers were tethered together and ascending the mountain above Helen Lake when one of them lost their footing, causing all three to fall. All three climbers slid on snow and ice 1,500 to 2,500 vertical feet down the mountain, according to the sheriff’s office.

Webster was unresponsive after the fall. A nurse, who was climbing nearby, administered CPR to Webster. A California Highway Patrol helicopter airlifted Webster  to Mercy Medical Center in Mount Shasta where she died.

The helicopter also airlifted a male climber to the Ski Bowl parking area, where medical personnel transferred him to an air ambulance that flew him to Mercy Medical Center in Redding. He was under observation and recovering as of Monday evening, the sheriff’s office said.

A female climber also was taken in the CHP helicopter to the Ski Bowl parking area. She was transferred to a ground ambulance that took her to Mercy Mount Shasta. She, too, was under observation and recovering.

The second fall left another climber in critical condition, the sheriff’s office said.

What looked like a solid freeze on Mt. Shasta turned out to be very unstable, said people recreating on Monday.