





All about my exploits on the bike and with my fellow hikers.









Missing rescued after fell race
Sun Jun 07 15:11:54 UTC 2009
All the people who went missing in bad weather during a Snowdonia fell race have been found, RAF rescue teams say.
Eight people were airlifted to hospital and another 25 people were helped to safety during the day.
Two people remained unaccounted for some time but they were finally located late on Saturday.
The annual, 22-mile Welsh 1,000m Peaks Race involved 245 competitors and had been due to finish on the summit of Snowdon, but was later abandoned.
Mountain rescue teams and the RAF were involved in the search in the Carneddau mountains, near Bethesda, from about 1500 BST.
The race involves teams of runners and mountaineers from clubs and the armed services. A soldier died in a 500ft fall while competing in the race in 2007.
The event started on the Gwynedd coast at Aber before a course through peaks in the Carneddau mountains, with the finish on Snowdon.
A North Wales Police spokeswoman said the race began at around 0900 BST, with calls to police coming in from about an hour later due to the "atrocious weather conditions".
The force co-ordinated the rescue from the Ogwen Valley mountain rescue team base and counted runners, walkers and mountaineers as they returned.
Those rescued included some army cadets.
Dave Worrall, team leader of Ogwen Valley Mountain Rescue Team said most of those runners they had dealt with were suffering from cold and hypothermia.
The 22-mile long race took in Snowdonia peaks and was due to finish on Snowdon
He said the weather had been exceptional for the time of year and it would have been a "difficult call" for race organisers.
Helicopters from RAF Valley, on Anglesey, and Chivenor, in Devon, were involved in the rescue, along with members of the Ogwen Valley and Valley Mountain rescue teams.