Coast Guard swimmer who pulled body from Thor’s Well tells sightseers “It’s not worth risking your life to peer over the edge … There’s nothing in it.”

Seal Rock Fire Department A Coast Guard helicopter lowers rescue swimmer Tyler Gantt into Thor’s Well on Monday afternoon in an attempt to recover the body of a man who fell into it and drowned.

 

Editor’s note: this story was updated Thursday, Sept. 18 with the victim’s identity.

By GARRET JAROS/Lincoln Chronicle

YACHATS — Unsure what they might face on the call that a man had fallen into Thor’s Well at the base of Cape Perpetua, the four Coast Guard crewmen discussed possible rescue scenarios as they flew from North Bend.

The helicopter crew regularly flies past the majestic sinkhole that draws people to watch incoming tides flow from its maw before draining back into the sea. But none had ever visited it on foot.

The official U.S. Coast Guard photo of rescue swimmer Tyler Gantt

“We didn’t know what to expect,” said rescue swimmer Tyler Gantt, 31, who would eventually pull the man’s body from the water Monday afternoon. “There was talk about if this guy gets swept out to the open ocean and flying search patterns. And that’s pretty common for a case like this.”

The helicopter bucked “a pretty gnarly headwind” of 16-to-20 knots out of the north during the 20-minute flight from North Bend.

The crew talked about what they would do if the man was still clinging to a rock and how they would manage the hoist to lower Gantt. But when they arrived the firefighters on the ground asked them to fly directly above the hole and look down because they believed the man was still inside.

He was.

The body was face down in the water, appearing and disappearing as the ocean rose and fell 20 feet with each incoming and outgoing wave, filling it from below.

“When you show up to that it’s really just ‘Oh man, this sucks’,” Gantt said Tuesday in an interview with the Lincoln Chronicle. “But body recovery is important, important for families to have closure and important for the fire department to not have to put themselves in harm’s way and potentially add more bodies to the disaster. Because the safest way to retrieve that body was what we did – hoisting him into the helicopter from directly above.”

But descending on a steel cable from a helicopter steadying against a headwind into a 20-foot diameter hole filling and emptying with crashing surf is no easy feat. And Gantt, who has 10 years of experience as a rescue swimmer, said it ranks among the most dangerous assignments he has faced.

On Thursday, Oregon State Police identified the man as Brendan D. Long, 28, of Lone Tree, Colo. and said he was swept into the well while having his picture taken.

Boyhood dream

Gantt has known he wanted to be a Coast Guard rescue swimmer since age eight, after watching Astoria-based crews on the news from his hometown of Hillsboro.

“I thought it was really cool and that’s kind of paved the way since,” he said. “That got me into swim lessons, which got me onto the swim team. And then swim team got me into my first job at 16 as a lifeguard at the Hillsboro pool.”

U.S. Coast Guard A U.S. Coast Guard photo shows rescue swimmer Tyler Gantt and his helicopter crew stationed at Air Station North Bend.

He joined the Coast Guard four years later.

He still remembers his first rescue as a lifeguard, pulling someone out of the pool.

“It felt good,” he said. “And I’ve been chasing it ever since. The rescues now are a little more crazy than a pool of course … And they’re not all enjoyable. Yesterday was not fun and not good. We gave the guy the best chance we could, but yeah, that’s where my passion for it comes from.”

After serving his mandatory 1½ years on a ship in Kodiak, Alaska, Gantt applied for and was accepted into rescue swimmer school. The notoriously difficult and physically grueling six-month school graduates only the most qualified.

“There’s a very high failure rate,” Gantt said. “Just to give you a snapshot, I had 26 members in my class and four of us graduated. And that’s pretty normal. The class before us only graduated two.”

Rescue swimmers rotate duty stations every four years. Gantt first served on Alabama’s Gulf Coast before moving on to Port Angeles, Wash., and then a year ago to North Bend.

Seal Rock Fire Department First responders from fire departments in Yachats, Waldport and Seal Rock set a backup rescue rope Monday as Coast Guard rescue swimmer Tyler Gantt is lowered into Thor’s Well.

Several attempts

The strong headwind Monday afternoon actually helped pilot Jimmy Hollingsworth hover above Thor’s Well as flight mechanic Dylan Morris operated the hoist to lower Gantt. Co-pilot Blake Thompson monitored the radio and watched the waves, calling them out as they came in to give a countdown before they arrived.

“Dylan and I talked about where I wanted to be hoisted down to and what the hoist would look like, ultimately deciding to leave me on the hook because I wasn’t going to disconnect with this one,” Gantt said. “Our plan was to put me down to the ground and treat it like a cliff rescue. We train a lot with vertical surface cliff rescues. So, I was going to hoist down to the rock and then while keeping tension on the cable, lean back and begin to climb into the Well.”

Photo courtesy of Cathy Starfas Bystanders unsuccessfully tried to help a man who fell into Thor’s Well on Monday afternoon and drowned.

There was no solid rock, only barnacles and mussels lining the walls as Gantt, outfitted in a dry suit, neoprene gloves, helmet and boots descended into the hole.

Gantt was careful not to climb too far down because he could see overhangs and when the tide surged out, caverns and cavities farther below.

“I told Dylan the plan was as soon as I come off the rock and the grab the guy — just pull us back up,” Gantt said. “I don’t want to be floating in the Well for too long because the cable was played out and I have tension on the cable …”

Gantt said the cable could snap if it went slack as he rose with the waves and tightened as the waves dropped.

He made several efforts to grab the man, reaching for any part he could glimpse as the body appeared and then disappeared in the surf.

“But what was happening is I would dismount the rock to grab the guy, Dylan was super fast in pulling me back up, which is great, but it was also making it so I couldn’t quite get a hand hold on the guy. The unfortunate thing is I couldn’t see his whole body. I would only see something, and then I would grab that and then quickly have to realize what I’m grabbing and go from there to try and get my arms underneath his and around his back or chest.”

After a couple of missed attempts, Gantt communicated with hand signals to abort and hoist him up. He knew they had to reset. Firefighters radioed to ask if they were calling it quits.

“We said ‘No, we’ve just got to make some adjustments’,” Gantt said. “So Dylan and I talked a little bit and I told him once I dismount the rocks give me a few seconds, one one-thousand, two one-thousand and then pull us out of the water.”

The adjustment worked. It took a couple of tries but Gantt was able to get a grip on the man and Morris and Hollingsworth quickly maneuvered to set the pair on the flat rocks beside Thor’s Well. Gantt then secured the man with a strap and they were brought quickly aboard the helicopter.

The operation would last just 20 minutes.

Gantt, who is also the crew’s emergency medical technician, checked the man’s airway, breathing and circulation, and then finding no pulse began CPR as the helicopter swept toward Samaritan Pacific Communities Hospital in Newport.

Quinton Smith / Lincoln Chronicle A man stands near Thor’s Well during an incoming tide Monday afternoon about an hour after another man fell into the hole and drowned.

Danger level and a warning

As Gantt recalled the story for the Lincoln Chronicle on Tuesday from his home in Coos Bay, the soon-to-be father – a baby girl is due in two weeks – said the danger level was “up there” and that Thor’s Well is actually much smaller than he originally thought.

“It was a little bit tight in there,” Gantt said. “And just the psychological hurdle of being in there with a body that’s just surfacing out of the water whenever. You don’t know when or where and you’re in the water with them, is a tough thing to manage.”

There was the risk of breaking the cable, Gantt said, and then he would be inside Thor’s Well with the body.

Photo courtesy of Stephanie Reed Two men sit close to the edge of Thor’s Well at the base of Cape Perpetua on Monday afternoon shortly before a man fell into the hole and drowned.

“And I’d be better equipped wearing a dry suit and a helmet so if I hit my head, I’d probably be okay and be able to climb out. But there’s also like I said, some pretty deep caverns that go underneath the rocks and shoot out underneath that shelf. So to keep out of those was definitely on my mind the whole time.”

As the interview came to close, Gantt asked to share one last thing.

“I’ve heard of Thor’s Well and the lives it’s claimed in the past,” he said. “And I read this morning in the Chronicle that an hour after we departed the scene people were walking right back down to Thor’s Well and trying to get a look inside.

“Now, speaking as someone who’s been inside Thor’s Well, not very many people have been in it and lived. But speaking as someone who’s been in it – there’s nothing to see in there. It’s a hole in a rock. It’s not worth risking your life to peer over the edge and take a look inside. There’s nothing in it.

“The only cool thing about it to see is the waves coming out of the spout from a safe distance. That’s all I have to say about that.”

  • Garret Jaros covers the communities of Yachats, Waldport, south Lincoln County and natural resources issues for Lincoln Chronicle and can be reached at GJaros@YachatsNews.com

 

 

Here’s the original story published Monday, Sept. 16 on the drowning at Thor’s Well

By Lincoln Chronicle staff

YACHATS – A man fell into Thor’s Well and drowned Monday, the third such victim since 2017 at the popular but dangerous attraction near the base of Cape Perpetua just south of Yachats.

Police and fire agencies were called about 3:40 p.m. to a report of a man who had been swept inside the well during an incoming tide.

The man was dead by the time first responders could reach the 20-30 foot deep hole in the basalt at the edge of the Pacific Ocean 100 yards below and west of U.S. Highway 101.

The victim’s body was eventually pulled from inside the well by a U.S. Coast Guard rescue swimmer dangling on a long cable from a helicopter dispatched from the Coast Guard’s station in North Bend. The helicopter arrived 30 minutes after the first report of the man in the water.

Firefighters and paramedics from fire departments in Yachats, Waldport and Seal Rock along with Oregon State Police personnel responded, as did Lincoln County’s chief medical examiner.

In a Facebook post Monday evening, the Yachats fire department said that the first arriving units “were met with conflicting reports from bystanders” about whether the man was in the water. It said responders “were quickly able to determine that the subject was in the water in Thor’s Well. Due to wave conditions and the nature of the well, personnel on the ground were unable to perform any recovery efforts.”

On Thursday, Oregon State Police identified the man as Brendan D. Long, 28, of Lone Tree, Colo. and said he was swept into the well while having his picture taken. Long’s car full of camping gear and personal belongings was later towed from the parking lot along Highway 101.

Within an hour of the drowning and the parking lot still full of police and fire vehicles people were standing at the edge of Thor’s Well trying to peer inside.

 

15 Comments Leave a Reply

  1. Yes, I was there taking my first photos on my new phone. I have photos of that wave and the people running back to the well. I was talking to another that had a photo of him inching way down the well. I felt no need to stay and watch them remove the body. We were boxed in for a while with the emergency people there.

    • It’s time to put a steel fence around this well known dangerous place. I don’t see any warning signs in this photo.

      • I don’t agree. If we did this then pretty much the entire Oregon Coast would be fenced off. The coast is a wild place. Do we fence all of our wild places and turn them ugly steel fenced areas? What happened is tragic. But a fence is not the answer; people climb over them anyway so it really would not change anything.

      • There shouldn’t have to be warning signs when a place is obviously so dangerous. People still climb over fences for their photo ops and don’t heed warning signs. All those do is ruin our coastline with unnecessary hardware and words. I’m beyond sad anyone has lost their life at Thor’s Well, but there are numerous other lost lives all up and down our coastline. This number is actually relatively low considering how many years and how many people visit there. This was unfortunate. But I can’t see closing Multnomah Falls and yet look how many hikers die up there. As sensient human beings, we need to be responsible for our own selves and police our own actions. Why should everyone have to stare at ugly fences and signs because a few put themselves into these positions?

      • We cannot fence off every dangerous thing. There are plenty of signs along the way down to that area. It’s the same as people getting too close to the edge to take a selfie or look and end up falling. Sadly they took that risk. It’s on them. They put others at risk for their lapse in judgement. There easily could have been another falling in while trying to rescue him. It’s sad beyond belief but this needs to be a lesson for everyone that nature is dangerous. Just because it’s not fenced off doesn’t mean it’s safe.

        • P.S. A HUGE thank you to the rescuers that tried to help this man and the others that finally got him out. I’ve been to this area several times and I can’t imagine what you went through to try and get him out. Prayers to the family of the man who perished and continued prayers for our Coast Guard who come to the rescue.

  2. Places like Thor’s Well, Devil’s Churn, Devil’s Punchbowl, the Depoe Bay sea wall, etc., don’t need warning signs, fencing, flashing red lights, or an “aaaa-OOOGA” horn. If cliffs, sharp, wet rocks, the pounding of billions of gallons of sea water and all the other aspects of nature that can kill a human don’t deter people from taking unnecessary risks, then natural selection will. Stop advocating for sign pollution on our beautiful coast.

    • Amen! I have been there several times since my best friend and her husband have a condo just a few miles north of Yachats. I grew up south of Florence, or just a few miles north of where the rescue swimmer is from so I have been all up and down the Oregon coast and there are a multitude of beautiful beaches and sites.

      Growing up we would hit the beaches after a storm and search for glass balls and sand dollars. (Unlike the Yachats are that is super rocky, only seem to find broken ones, we often found and still occasionally find whole ones on the beaches in Winchester Bay)

      All the time I spent on the beaches and still love to spend as much time there as I can, I have always respected and stayed vigilant to all the dangers that a person can encounter depending on what beach, trail, tide pool or cliff you are visiting. I say visiting because the sea owns these places. The force and power that is held by these majestic sites can be felt deep down into your soul. The noise of crashing waves cuts deep and you can never walk away from any of any of these places no matter how many times you visit without taking the perfume of the sea with you. (The sticky salt sea air that sticks to every inch of you)

      As long as you are vigilant of the tides if walking beaches that disappear at high tide or as in the case of Thors well, he tells you the minute you arrive.

      My point is, anyone with any common sense knows what the sea and powerful waves and wind is telling you. Signs are not going to prevent thrill seekers from taking chances or hoping to outrun or outsmart mother nature and her sea gods.

      Not to mention, in today’s world all the politics that would result by putting up ugly metal signs with warnings or danger ahead. (You get it right? Signs for every language? Concerns over hazards the signs could cause. Environmentalist views. To mention a few)

      Keep these places just as they are. Trust in the words of the rescue swimmer Tyler Gantt who looked right into the eye of Thor’s well among not to mention all the others he has encountered at his young age but over a decade of experience. Not only is he that good to become a rescue swimmer for the Coast Guard but he also is very aware and respectful of the dangers.

      • Tracy M. what beautiful writing! Thank you for your insights and experience. I will take “perfume of the sea” with me every time I walk our majestic coastal areas. Common sense has become too uncommon and we all must have personal responsibility with our actions.
        Thank you Tracy M!

    • Completely agree. There are plenty of signs up on the observation deck which you have to walk across to get to Thor’s Well. When Rangers stop there on patrol and warn visitors, their advice is largely ignored. People don’t realize nature is the boss and if you take a foolish risk, there are consequences.

  3. Thank you, Garrett Jaros, for bringing us the story of Tyler Gantt’s heroic feat of recovering that man’s body. We get a sense of how a well trained and competent crew handles an incredibly dangerous job. A great tribute to the Coast Guard. And a beautiful piece of journalism.

  4. Thank you for posting the article about the rescue swimmer. His interview is pretty amazing! We are so lucky to have these rescue people here. Bless them all and give them what they need to keep them safe.

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