Sheriff investigating boat collision that severed teen surfer's arm
This photo released by Paul Snodgrass, shows a dory boat after it reportedly collided with a surfer on Sunday July 6, 2008 off the coast of Cape Kiwanda, Wash. An Oregon boy lost his left arm in a surfing accident off the coast of Cape Kiwanda, authorities said. Cole Ortega, 14, of Bend collided with a dory boat that was coming into shore Sunday morning in 8- to 10-foot swells, said Sheriff Todd Anderson of Tillamook County. The collision occurred about 100 yards off the beach at a time when there were numerous surfers and boats in the water. (AP Photo/Courtesy Paul Snodgrass) By Associated PressPACIFIC CITY, Ore. (AP) -- Those who witnessed a 14-year-old surfer lose his arm in a collision with an incoming dory boat off Cape Kiwanda say the accident resulted from a series of unfortunate circumstances in a spot with increasingly heavy ocean traffic. Cole Ortega, 14, of Bend was listed in serious condition Monday night at Legacy Emanuel Hospital, where he taken by helicopter after Sunday's accident near Pacific City. Another surfer found the severed arm and brought it to the beach so it could be taken with Ortega to the hospital. Hospital officials said Tuesday they would not comment on attempts to reattach the arm. They said that was at the request of Ortega's family. A family friend and Ortega's snowboard coach said the arm had been attached in surgery.
"You've got windsurfers (and) surfers. You've got hang gliders (and) people waiting on the shore line. You've got all kinds of different user groups down there," Reeder said Monday. "You've got swimmers, too, and kayakers. And when you put all of those together in one spot, it doesn't always work out, like we found out yesterday." Dory boat driver Darrell Martin, 55, of Beaver could not be reached for comment, but a witness who said he spoke with Martin on the beach told The Oregonian newspaper that Martin was in shock and expressed extreme remorse. Frank Lippy, a Kaiser Permanente emergency room doctor and a surfer, was at the beach and treated Ortega. He told the paper that Ortega's wetsuit helped preserve the limb, which was wrapped in sterile gauze, put in plastic bag and then placed on ice. A family friend, Michele Schnake, said Tuesday that the surgery had been completed, and the Ortegas were "just waiting to see how it turns out." Snowboard coach Hans Hibbard said blood was flowing to the limb. Dories have been launching and landing directly off the beach for decades, part of the local tourist and fishing lore. But surfers and other users have started to appear there in greater numbers. A witness, Ned Brewer, 51, of Portland, said he has been surfing at Pacific City since 1992. He said Sunday started out with a small swell, ideal to launch the dories, and most of the surfers were actually away from that spot, working beach break waves. After the dories had launched, he said, the swell rose dramatically, luring the surfers back to catch the best waves in a channel where the boats launch. The high swell also meant that dories needed to start coming into shore, bringing everyone together. He was in a line of about 20 surfers when suddenly a friend appeared next to him, saying he was almost hit by a boat. The surfer told Brewer, "I could feel the prop go over my legs." Moments later, there was yelling. "I heard someone scream, 'Oh, my god!' and I started paddling toward him," Brewer said. Ortega is an accomplished athlete, a champion in slopestyle snowboarding and other sports. The Bend Bulletin reported that he finished first overall in his age group in slopestyle at a national meet last winter at Copper Mountain, Colo. "I was stunned," said his coach, Hibbard. "Cole's such an active and athletic kid. It's difficult to think of him being in this position without actually seeing it — it's hard to imagine."
Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. |
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