What it takes to respond: An Interview with Kinder Mountain Rescue
10/2021

10/2021
@Sam Walker
Sam Walker
Sam Waller
For the last 50 years the Kinder Mountain Rescue Team has been helping climbers, hikers and fair-weather walkers enjoy the spectacular splendour of Kinder Scout in the Peak District, assisting with everything from rolled ankles to full-on late-night rescue missions.
Itās an impressive operation, especially when you realise that the team is operated solely by volunteers, who are on-call around the clockāalways primed to drop everything to head to the hills, whatever the weather.
Alan Howarth has been part of the KMRT for 18 years, balancing a full-time job and family life with his commitments as Deputy Team Leader. We called him up to find out more about the team, what they do, and how you can avoid meeting them...

You had a call-out last night. What happened? Were you out for long?

It was a straightforward oneāwe found them pretty quickly, but it was still about half 10 when we got home. It takes time.

Are call-outs like that a regular thing? How often do you head out?

You often get a couple of weeks where you get nothing, then youāll have a sudden glut of callouts. Weāve done quite a few in the last couple of weeks, but we had two or three weekends before then when we didnāt get a call-out at all. Monday night is a rare one. The weird thing is that whenever you expect a call-out, it never happens. On clear days with long daylight hours, we tend to go out more for injuries than anything else. If we get a call at three oāclock on a Saturday afternoon, thereās a fair chance itās going to be an injury, whereas if we get a call at eight oāclock on a Saturday night, itās probably going to be someone whoās lost.
ā...We had no idea where they were, and itās a huge area.ā

Can you tell us any more about the call-out you had last night?

In this case, they were in our popular spot for rescues. Kinder has a major route around the edgeāa path that everyone followsāand then thereās another path that halfway along disappears and people have to take random routes. These guys did that, and it was really muddy. They had been knee deep in a bog, itād gone dark and it was really cold and windy. They couldnāt decide whether to backtrack their route, or carry on, but they didnāt know how far they had to go, so they fortunately sat down and had mobile signal. If they didnāt have signal, it would have been very different.We did one where a lady and her son were lost, and that was in the same place, but the difference was that they didnāt have signal, and we only found out about them as the police found their car in the car park. Her husband called the police to say they hadnāt turned up, but that was after a couple of hours of waiting around, wondering why they werenāt back yet, and then it was maybe an hour for the police to come and check the car park. So we had no idea where they were, and itās a huge area.

That changes things completelyāthatās a full search.

In that scenario, we call all the teams in the Kinder area. Thereās four of them, so that means there can be 30 or 40 people from each team, all out at the same time, plus search dogs. Weāve had that situation before where it turns out theyāre not even there, but 120 people have turned out. Itās such a big area that youāve got to absolutely blast it, otherwise by the time you find them itās too late.

And youāre on call all the time for this? Or do you have shifts?

No, we donāt have shifts. The way we operate is that we work on the grounds that we need about 25 people to operate a call-out. Weāve got 50 team members, permanently on call all the time, and we assume weāll get around a 50% hit rate of people turning up.

How did you get involved in the Mountain Rescue then?

This year is my 18th year. I used to be into climbing and the outdoors when I was single, and then when I got married and had kids, it kind of grinded to a halt a bitāI couldnāt just go off for the weekend with my mates climbing in the same way. Just after my son was born, I was kicking my heels around a bit, and my wife had seen an article in the newspaper, saying the team were looking for members, and said why didnāt I apply. I thought, āWell, if youāre offeringā¦ā Because obviously it comes with a commitment from both of us. It can be quite hard work, but I must be getting something out of it, because 18 years later, Iām still as keen.

Have things changed for Mountain Rescue since youāve been involved?

The first thing thatās changed is that itās gotten significantly busier. The number of people on the hill has gone up year after year, and it stands to shoot up because of lock-down. When we had the first lockdown, it went really quietāwe had absolutely nothing for about six weeks. And then when things opened up again, we suddenly got really busy. The Peak District is one of the busiest national parks in the world, because itās so near so many urban conurbations, so I think itās going to continue to be ridiculously busy.
āThe number of people on the hill has gone up year after year, and it stands to shoot up because of lock-down.ā

Modern technology must have changed things a lot too?

Yeah, technology has made quite a big difference. When I first joined, we were just moving away from pagers onto texts. But the big game changer was the launch of the first phone location service called SARLOC, which is internal to Mountain Rescue. That basically worked by us sending them a text, and then itād send us back their GPS reference, and plot it on a map. The first time we used that was an enormous game changer. Before that, at best weād get a rough description from the casualty, but now we just need them to reply to our text and we get the ping on our map. That makes a massive difference. But if we donāt get that, and they donāt have signal, itās suddenly really hard.

I can imagine. Whatās the history of mountain rescue in the Peaks?

Before these teams were formed, mountain rescue in the Peak District was mainly an RAF (Royal Air Force) thing, going to get pilots whoād crashed whilst coming in to land. When aircraft navigation was poor, there used to be a lot of wrecks on the Peaks, so the RAF teams would go out to rescue those. The Peak District Mountain Rescue was set up after three scouts died doing a walking event, called the Four Inns Walk, in winter. It wasnāt properly marshalled, and they couldnāt get a proper rescue team to go and get them, so off the back of that, they thought theyād formalise it and set up proper teams. And our team kind of spun out of that really.
āWhat we do could be quite dangerous, but our job really is all about taking the risk out of it.ā

And they were just people, similar to you, who had day jobs?

Yeah, they were. They were mainly local walkers and climbers. I think before then, there was an informal thing where the local policeman would get the call, and then heād go and knock on peoplesā doors and say, āYou go climbing donāt you? Come and give me a lift.ā Heād round up a posse whoād go and help him. But there was no formal training going on there, so they wouldnāt operate particularly well together. A lot of what we do now is to make sure we have procedures for everything. Youād sort of think that what we do could be quite dangerous, but our job really is all about taking the risk out of it.
āTheyād been out since nine oāclock in the morning, and it was half one at night when we found them.ā

What do your family think of it?

Theyāre really used to it. My son has only ever known it. When I get the call, and my Thunderbirds ringtone goes off, they know Iām going out. Itās one of those things where if youāre sat at home, doing nothing, you never get a callāitās always when youāre going for a meal, or going to the cinema. Theyāre used to it though, theyāre really understanding about it. My wife rolls her eyes when the phone goes off, but when Iāve gone out and done something significant, sheāll be like, āYeah, you did the right thing there.ā You donāt know whatās going to develop as you goāsometimes on the āeasyā jobs, something happens and it turns into something significant. Weāve had some epics.

Is there a story youāre most proud of?

Well, I think the one that stands out was that lady and her son I mentioned before. Her and her son had been out all night in a pretty horrible storm. There was ice everywhere, it was freezing cold, and theyād been out since nine oāclock in the morning, and it was half one at night when we found them. He was in medium hypothermia, and she was drifting into unconsciousness and was literally about to die. Fortunately part of the search plan involved getting the coast guard helicopter to search as well, so when we found them we landed the helicopter and took them off to hospital. Sheād literally sat there with her 23 year old son and said their goodbyes. Theyād laid down and prepared to die when they heard one of our guys shouting for her as he came over the top. Sheād gone from being convinced that she was about to die, to suddenly being saved. Thatās why you do it.
āIt can be really emotionally draining... the highs are really high, and the lows are really low.ā

These are pretty extreme situations youāre getting into. Is there a certain character trait you find with people in these Mountain Rescue groups?

I think there are a number of character traits, I wouldnāt say thereās one. Ex-military people quite like it, because thereās the same camaraderie, in the same kind of areas. It gives them what they used to have when they were in the army. And then we get quite a lot of teachersāIām not quite sure why. Maybe because a lot of them are into the outdoors?Weāve moved away from that macho thing, where youāve got to carry as much weight as you can without complaining, and be able to yomp 20 miles at a time. Different people bring different things, so skills and decision making are just as important as the physical ability to go and do some of this.

I imagine youāve got to be quite emotionally strong too. There must be some occasions where things donāt go quite to plan.

Itās the usual thing where you get nothing for a couple of years, but then in the last two weeks, weāve had three fatalities that weāve dealt with. All of them are really emotionally draining. The worst thing for me was when we had one of our team members die when we were on a call-out. They had a heart attack whilst they were out. He was a guy Iād known since Iād joinedāheād been in the team for years, so yeahāit can be really emotionally draining. But itās one of those things where the highs are really high, and the lows are really low. Weāve got to really keep on top of following up on people, saying, āLook you did this today, do you want to talk about it? How are you feeling?ā We donāt want people to scuttle off and not tell anyone that theyāre having problems. We try to be as open as possible, and again, this is getting away from having too much of a macho culture. At least if people can talk about things, weāre a step further on. It can be really challenging, especially for people whoāve come straight out of a day job and their only training is what weāve given them. Theyāre going to have to deal with something that full-time emergency services will have to deal with, and theyād probably get a lot more professional support.

Maybe on the other side of that it shows that ānormal peopleā can do some pretty extraordinary things. Itās pretty impressive how someone can do all this after a day at work.

Yeah it is. When the teamās been out, looking for somebody in horrendous weather, and we get them, and everybody comes back, safe and in one piece, Iām really proud of them. Itās really good when it all comes together. Even though theyāre āamateursā, they operate really professionally.

Thatās something I was wanting to talk about actually. Is it all just funded by donations?

Yep, itās entirely donations. When I joined, it was mainly tin rattlingāwhich was all done by my team members. So as well as all this stuff, you had to go out and collect the money to go and do the stuff. But we now use social media, and we also pursue corporate grants. One grant might be the equivalent of five days stood collecting outside of Tescos.

If someone would like to donate, whatās the easiest way they can do that?

We have a Justgiving site, which seems to be the easiest way now. That seems to work really well.

Changing the angle a bit now, how do people avoid having to call you lot up? What should they be thinking about before they head to the hills?

One of the things that is really difficult is that the people we engage with, or the people who end up on our website, arenāt the people we need to be talking to. They already know what it is to be out in the mountains. If you take out injuries, which can happen to anybody, the people we tend to go looking for are the ones who underestimated what they were going to do. Maybe they thought theyād go out and have a walk in the snow, but didnāt realise it takes twice as long to walk in the snow, so itās gone dark. And if you werenāt planning to be out in the dark, you wonāt have a torch, so youāre immediately stuck.
āMost people we go and rescue, itās not one thing that has gone wrong, itās a couple of things on top of each other.

So itās a lack of preparation then?

Yeah, lack of preparation, and lack of awareness of what youāre doing, and how youāre doing it. With most people we go and rescue, itās not one thing that has gone wrong, itās a couple of things on top of each other. If it takes a bit longer, and youāve still got the path, thatās fineābut if it takes a bit longer, and youāre not on the path, and itās starting to get dark, things start to add up, and thatās where it goes wrong. And itās very hard for us to get that message across to people who arenāt planning a day out in the hillsātheyāre just going for a walk.

Itād maybe be unrealistic to expect everyone to go out fully kitted out with all the gear, but what would be an attainable step that everybody could take?

I think itās about assessing your equipment for the conditions youāre expecting. If youāre going up somewhere high, in poor conditions, youāre going to have a miserable day if you donāt have the right kitāeven if you donāt need rescuing, itās going to be horrible. In those conditions, you do need the right kit, but in easy conditions, you maybe only need a few things. Youāll want to get your footwear right, as otherwise youāre going to end up with blisters or a broken ankle, and youāll want to get your layering right. In high mountains, itās very rarely not windy, so you need something waterproof and windproof, and then you need something warm underneath itāparticularly if youāre going to stop. I always take what I need for the worst conditionsāit might go dark, it might be freezing, it might chuck it down with rain and I might be out for longer than I think, so Iāll have all those options covered.

That makes sense. What would you say to somebody who was maybe thinking of getting involved in something like this?

Weāre all in it for our love of the outdoors. Every one of us is another hill-walker, so essentially what we want is for people to be able to go out into the mountains, and feel safe doing it. We all do it for the love of it, so for anybody who was thinking of doing this, Iād thoroughly encourage it, as long as they realise the time commitment that comes with it.

Is there a high drop off rate with people who join?

There is. We try to explain as much as possible how consuming it is on your life, and how much it affects your family, but what tends to happen is that around two years in, we get a chunk of people dropping out. The novelty has worn off, and theyāve found out how hard it can be, and it maybe doesnāt work for them, or they get a change in circumstances, and they just canāt do it. But on the whole, once you get past a couple of years in, you tend to be in for a long time.
āWhen you trust people with your life, on regular occasions, you end up becoming really close...ā

Whatās kept you in it after all these years?

Itās the camaraderieāwhen you trust people with your life, on regular occasions, you end up becoming really close to them. And thereās also the fact that I get to go out and do something interesting. I might have nothing onāitās a boring night watching the tele, and then the phone goes off and suddenly, something exciting is going to be happening. You never know what itās going to be.

Itās not like meeting up every Thursday night to play badminton.

Yeah. We obviously have those kind of hobbies as well, but theyāre just not the same. They donāt fill that gap, and they donāt give me that feeling of, āToday Iāve done something really good.ā Itās quite rare, but occasionally, you do find somebody, and you actively save their lifeāand the buzz from that is something you donāt get anywhere else. You get home and think, āWell, after the last couple of years of effortāitās all been worthwhile.ā
The 50 members of the Kinder Mountain Rescue Team operate on a purely voluntary basis and are almost exclusively funded by public donations, with all proceeds from fundraising going directly towards equipment and resources used on call-outs.
Support the heroic efforts of the rescue team by giving a one-off or monthly donation on their official KMRT JustGiving pageĀ .