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Our latest news
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An experienced climber was soloing Window Gully on Great End and had almost completed the climb when he triggered an avalanche.
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TWO RESCUE MISSIONS IN TWO HOURS
TWO mountain rescue missions were launched in less than two hours over the weekend.
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Rescuers post record of major Peak District incident
A Peak District rescue team has turned the camera on its activities for an account of a major incident this weekend.
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Six-hour rescue as Lakeland mountain walkers get lost
Five walkers were rescued from England’s third highest mountain after getting lost in the dark.
MR in the news
BBC News and Sport Search: mountain rescue
A walker is airlifted to hospital with multiple injuries after falling 50ft down a cliff in the Peak District.
A pensioner who went missing from sheltered accommodation in Caithness is found dead on a beach.
A fire officer tells an inquiry into the death of a woman who fell down a mine shaft in Ayrshire that the rescue was a "success".
Police officers based at a nuclear site are among 60 people looking for a missing 65-year-old man.
An MSP says rules which may have stopped rescue workers pulling a women from a mine shaft must be reviewed.
Police are co-ordinating what they have described as one of their biggest search operations for a missing person.
Renewed warnings are issued after a climber survives an avalanche in the Lake District.
An inquiry into the death of an Ayrshire woman who fell down a mine shaft is told it collapsed just hours before the tragedy.
A fatal accident inquiry into the death of an Ayrshire lawyer who fell down a mine shaft hears of delays during the rescue effort.
The names of two climbers who were swept away by an avalanche in the Highlands are released by police.
Police identify a woman who died after her 4x4 was swept down a swollen river on the North York Moors as she tried to negotiate a ford.
Two skiers are airlifted to safety after being caught in an avalanche in the Cam Ghleann area of Glencoe.
Police divers find a woman's body near a car which was swept away in flood waters on the North York Moors.
An underwater police team conducts a search of the River Wear after a 30-year-old woman goes missing.
Two climbers swept away by an avalanche in the Glencoe area of the Highlands have died, police confirm.
The families of two Teesside men injured in an avalanche on a Lake District fell have thanked their rescuers.
A walker is being treated in hospital after he was seriously injured in a fall while on the north face of Ben Nevis.
Rescuers say two men were "very lucky" to survive after an avalanche swept them 750ft (228m) down a fell in the Lake District.
Two climbers are swept 750ft (228m) down a fell after triggering an avalanche in the Lake District.
A walker who became lost on Snowdon is airlifted to safety in poor weather conditions.
From BBC News
SARDA
SARDA
The National Search and Rescue Dog Association (NSARDA) is the umbrella organisation for air scenting search and rescue dogs in the UK. There are currently three separate associations representing dog handlers in England and Wales – SARDA England, SARDA Wales and SARDA Lakes.
The majority of search dogs are Border Collie, although it has been said that any dog can be trained, provided the chemistry is right between dog and handler, and there are many other breeds in active service.
The air scenting search dog is trained to locate any human scent on the wind and then follow that scent to its source. Scent is carried downwind in a cone shape from the casualty, widening with distance. The dog will work up the cone shape in a zig zag pattern.
Before commencing training a pup, a dog handler must first be a fully operational team member. Not only must they be fit and able to work in the rugged environment and extremes of weather but, as potentially the first team member to arrive at an incident scene, they must be competent in first aid and casualty care.
The trust between handler and dog is paramount, their commitment to the job verging on obsession. They must devote huge amounts of time to training and assessment, over and above their regular team training and, as there are few dog handling teams across the UK, they are often called to travel long distances to assist other teams further afield.
A search dog is trained that, on a word of command, they will go off to hunt for a body, remaining under the constant control of the handler as he or she directs the dog over the designated search area. Once the casualty has been located, the dog must guide its owner towards that spot by 'indicating' – usually by barking.
They are required to take a 'stock test', early in their training, to ensure the safety of any sheep or cattle they encounter. Dog teams work regularly under their own steam with volunteer 'bodies', who will hide on the hill (usually equipped with blanket, book and thermos flask!) waiting to be found. Official SARDA training courses are organised throughout the year, to enable handlers and their dogs to improve and extend their performance. Their progress is marked with a series of grades as specified standards are attained and, once graded, these standards must be maintained. Assessment continues throughout a dog's working life.
Besides their use in a mountain environment, search dogs are often used in the urban environment, working alongside police dog resources.
Trailing dogs
Over the past few years, SARDA Wales has been experimenting with 'trailing dogs'. Trailing involves the dog wearing a harness, with the handler holding a long line and following behind. The dog follows the trail of the missing person using a combination of ground scent and the air scents either side. A scent article, such as a hat or glove, allows the dog to discriminate the lost person scent from the scent of everyone else in the area. This process is useful if, for example, a misper's car is discovered parked up somewhere. The dog can take the scent of the driver's seat and be able to indicate a direction of travel, so halving the search area.
Trailing is not very practical for mountain searches – air scenting dogs will cover the area much quicker – but a trailing dog could drastically reduce the time spent searching for Alzheimer's patients and suicides.