Nearly 100 Children Airlifted From Mountain After Teachers Bungle Hike

Dozens of schoolchildren had to be airlifted from a dangerous mountain hiking trail after their teachers bungled the route.

Alpine rescuers scrambled two helicopters and 50 extraction experts to pluck the 99 youngsters from an Austrian mountainside in heavy rain.

Furious officials blamed the adults accompanying the children for misreading advice on the hazardous path.

The trail is, in fact, so dangerous it was removed from official tourist guides.

Kids rescued from mountain
Alpine rescuers sent two helicopters and 50 extraction experts to rescue the 99 youngsters from an Austrian mountainside in heavy rain. Bergrettung Riezlern/Zenger

A teacher only called the police for help when the students, between the ages of 12 and 14, and eight adults became trapped on the Alpine track in Hirschegg on the Austrian-German border.

A group leader realized the exhausted children could go neither forward nor return to their hotel down in the valley.

Two students had already suffered injuries as they fell over on the slippery and rocky trail. Police later said that many of the children were not wearing appropriate footwear for the hike.

Klaus Drexel, spokesman for the Vorarlberg Mountain Rescue Association, said it was just a lucky break that his team had access to two helicopters for the rescue.

"We split them into groups. The worsening weather conditions made this operation even more challenging," he said.

"We consider recent developments on the internet very critical.

"Some trails that are listed and rated on the different websites even don't exist anymore."

It later emerged that the teacher planning the trip chose the route after reading a post on a hiking website. It was described as an ideal opportunity for a "relaxed after-work stroll," but she failed to notice that the post's author was an expert climber who had posted nearly 300 hiking and climbing reports.

Rescue in Austrian Alps
Ninety-nine students and eight teachers were rescued on June 7, 2022, from a mountain in the Austrian Alps after a hiking trip took a wrong turn. Bergrettung Riezlern/Zenger

Drexel later warned: "Naively trusting what you read somewhere online can get you into unpleasant situations."

He appealed to tourists who are unsure about hiking trails to ask the local tourism office or alpine associations for advice.

More than 50 mountain rescuers, firefighters and medical staff participated in the huge rescue.

Several students reportedly suffered from hypothermia and some needed counseling from local psychologists.

Vorarlberg Police spokesman Wolfgang Duer said: "Our teams concentrated on getting the students into the valley as quickly as possible.

"The rescue call was made in the late afternoon and it getting dark quickly."

It is unclear whether the school will have to foot the bill for the rescue.

Local police have filed a report to the state prosecutors in Feldkirch, in the western Austrian state of Vorarlberg.

In recent years, Austrian authorities have intensified their attempts to charge tourists for complex rescue operations.

There have been numerous cases of tourists airlifted to safety after opting for challenging hiking paths while wearing just flip-flops or sneakers.

Local rescue agencies warn of the dangers of changes to weather conditions such as sudden downpours, thunderstorms, and intense snowfall throughout the year.

Andreas Haid, mayor of the local town of Mitterberg, said it was getting harder and harder to verify the quality of hiking reports on the internet.

"There are more and more individuals acting totally irresponsible by posting such texts online," he said.

Vorarlberg Police pointed out that the hiking track chosen by the German group was anything but easy, saying, "The narrow Heuberggrat path features climbing passages. Individuals with a lack of experience should not take it.

"That is the reason why the local tourism office decided to remove it from their maps some time ago."

The hiking group, from Ludwigshafen across the German border, started out at Schoental in Vorarlberg's Kleinwalsertal Valley. They planned to take the Heuberggrat to reach the Walmendingerhorn Mountain's 6,529-foot peak.

Cornelia Schwartz, head of an association representing teachers in the German State of Rhineland-Palatinate, defended the teacher over her decision to take the large group on the hike.

Schwartz argued teachers were under high pressure to create an interesting and exciting variety of activities to their classes during trips abroad.

She added that many teachers abstain from booking a local guide due to their limited budgets.

Thomas Wanner from the Austrian Alpine Union said the school must brace for a hefty bill if they did not care to obtain special insurance.

Wanner explained: "Getting rescued with a chopper costs at least between 3,000 and 5,000 Euros ($3,200 to $5,300)."

Vorarlberg is one of Austria's nine states. The small mountainous region is situated in the very west of the Central European country and shares borders with Switzerland, Liechtenstein and Germany.

Vorarlberg is one of Austria's top destinations for skiing vacationers from all over the world, as well as for hikers and mountain cycling enthusiasts during summertime.

This story was provided to Newsweek by Zenger News.

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