News

Climber, 28, didn’t make a sound as he fell to death in front of wife


Daniel's brown hair curls from beneath his grey beany, while Emma's sunglasses block the sun reflecting off the snowcapped mountains.

Daniel and Emma Heritage was just a few months into a two-year trip to Canada (Picture: The Heritage Family)

Emma Heritage watched as her husband Daniel rolled off the cliff and fell to his death, one ledge at a time.

It was the end of the Australians’ first summer in Canada, and the moderate-risk Mother’s Day Buttress in Banff National Park was highlight recommended.

The couple, both experienced climbers aged 28, thought it might be their last climb of the year, but neither knew it would be their last ever together.

Emma, who met her husband when they were both 18, remembers Daniel’s last words after losing sight of him as they climbed.

‘Phew, that was a little harder than I expected’, he said, concealed by the edge of a steep corner crack.

She waited for the all-clear to continue her ascent. Some 15 minutes passed as she looked out on the forests, cliffs and peaks of the Canadian Rocky Mountains.

Then the rope slackened and, without a sound, Daniel fell.

Emma told Climbing.com: ‘My stomach dropped as I saw Daniel rolling on his back, at great speed towards the edge that I had last seen him.

The experienced climbers first met when they were 18 years old (Picture: The Heritage Family)

‘His body continued to roll and took flight off the edge of the steep corner. He continued to fall, tumbling down a series of ledges to where I was stationed at the anchor.

‘As soon as Daniel landed I knew there wasn’t much I could do.’

She later told The Advertiser: ‘He didn’t yell or make any noise. There was a lot of bleeding from his mouth, he very quickly lost consciousness and he wasn’t responsive.’

His helmet couldn’t save his head from the severe injuries that 20-metre fall inflicted, so Emma cradled him as she waited 90 minutes for a rescue team to arrive.

But instead of relief, their arrival brought the hardest moment of Emma’s life.

Banff National Park is famous for its sheer cliffs and tall peaks (Picture: Luis Leamus/Getty Images/iStockphoto)

She was their priority for evacuation by helicopter. She said: ‘I knew when the rescuers first directed the plan to get me down before Daniel.

‘I think that was probably one of the most heartbreaking moments for me because I had to step away from him.’

In following weeks, Emma learnt an important fact about a loved one’s death – bureaucracy does not wait for grief.

A coroner needed to rule out foul play, then the funeral home needed a deposit £6,000, plus £4,000 to fly Daniel’s body back to Adelaide, and another £8,000 for the funeral.

Their insurance wouldn’t cover it, so they turned to family and friends for support. Daniel’s mother paid the funeral home, and another £22,000 came through GoFundMe.

Emma still doesn’t understand why Daniel fell, but she is ‘forever grateful for knowing’ him (Picture: The Heritage Family)

‘I was pretty keen to get Daniel back home to his family’, Emma said, ‘but it was funny, I had this conflict, leaving Canada was farewelling this adventure …read more

Source:: Metro

      

(Visited 2 times, 1 visits today)

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *