Four rescue workers in helmets carry a person on a stretcher through a forest, navigating uneven terrain among trees and greenery.
Waterbury Backcountry Rescue Team on a rescue. Photo courtesy of David Cutler

This story by Sarah Andrews was first published in The Waterbury Roundabout via the Community News Service, which is part of the University of Vermont’s Reporting & Documentary Storytelling program.

WATERBURY — A few weeks ago, a young man wandered off the Bamforth Ridge Trail on Camel’s Hump. At around 3 a.m., his cell phone battery was exhausted, and he was guiding himself by the cardiac monitor light on his smartwatch.

Around 1 a.m., Waterbury Backcountry Rescue Team was called out to find the missing hiker. The team searched the trails for hours before one member saw that flashing green cardiac light in the darkness. The team located the lost hiker and guided him back to the parking lot. 

Through the start of Octobor, the team had responded to 15 calls so far this year, compared to 10 in all of 2024, according to Brian Lindner, a founding member of the group. “The numbers just change drastically,” Lindner said. “2025 is looking to be a record year … and we’re not at our busy season yet.” 

Whether it’s frozen boots or broken tibias, Waterbury Backcountry Rescue Team is prepared to respond to any kind of backcountry crisis.  Since the organization began responding to emergencies in Waterbury’s outdoor recreation areas in 2002, it has rescued almost 300 hikers, skiers and mountain bikers.

WBRT is made up of 21 volunteers, all of whom are extensively trained to respond quickly and safely to crises on the summits of nearby peaks in the Green Mountains, such as Camel’s Hump, Mt. Hunger and Bolton Mountain.  The group was founded to fill the need for specialized backcountry rescues, a responsibility that used to fall under the purview of the Waterbury Fire Department. 

Backcountry rescues often require more than a dozen responders to execute properly, and often require highly technical training and precise equipment. “It was just willy-nilly,” Lindner said of those early days. “We had the wrong people there in the wrong places.”

Brian Linder shares Waterbury Ambulance and Backcountry Rescue memorabilia in a display case at the Steele Rescue Station. Photo by Sarah Andrews/CNS

“The firefighters are firefighters, and they were the ones getting called to respond to lost and injured people outside of their typical urban terrain,” said Heidi Higgins-Cutler, an EMT and longtime member of WBRT.

The backcountry rescue team was first formed as a special unit of Waterbury Ambulance Service, Inc. The nonprofit EMS outfit has been around since 1971, serving Waterbury, Duxbury and Moretown, along with neighboring EMS agencies as needed.

On a recent afternoon, Lindner and Higgins-Cutler shared stories of their rescues while they sat in Waterbury Ambulance Service’s newly built Steele Rescue Station. They were interrupted by the chatter of walkie-talkies and muffled radio calls.

Higgins-Cutler has been an EMT with Waterbury Ambulance Service, Inc. since 1982. She says that she has seen the need for backcountry response grow as more people get interested in the outdoors. “I got involved to be a caregiver, and to help carry where I can,” she said. “I’ve spent a lot of time on the mountain, and it holds a special place for me, so (WBRT) does as well.”

Lindner has been a first responder since 1986. During his childhood, his father worked as the patrol director at Stowe Mountain. “I actually remember getting dragged along on some of those rescues by him. I guess it was just the natural thing to do,” Lindner said.

More than half of the calls WBRT responds to are for searches, and WBRT responds quickly, Lindner said. “We’ve got a team in the woods, on the fly, and moving, within the first hour. That is not standard procedure,” he said.

In January 2011, a couple was skiing and snowboarding on Camel’s Hump. The pair got separated, and the woman got trapped in a ravine. The couple called 911, and the young woman was located, well after sunset, by a Vermont National Guard helicopter. Unhurt, the woman was guided out of the ravine by WBRT.  “We respond to a lot of those calls, where they are trapped by darkness,” Lindner said.

In fall foliage season now and as winter begins, Lindner stressed the importance of preparation by those heading out into the backcountry.  “The big thing we see is people going up on a warm sunny day, it’s 2 in the afternoon… It’s just wonderful. And they get up there, and this time of year, it gets dark quicker. It’s just being totally unprepared for the changing season,” Lindner said.

Higgins-Cutler adds that darkness is not the only potential hazard. “The folks who go with no water, they go with no food, no extra clothes, or 15% on their phone battery. Then, they are surprised when it takes us an hour and a half to get to them,” she said.

Higgins-Cutler and Lindner say that hydration and warm clothing are non-negotiables as the seasons change. “Headlamps are huge, fluids are huge, extra clothing is huge,” Lindner said. “Lone hikers are frequent; unprepared hikers are constant.”