A little too real safety reminder

I know people are always saying to be safe but this week really got the point across to me.  I came ripping down a hill at Murphy, a great park near my house, earlier this week and passed a guy sitting on the ground slightly off the trail.  I yelled back asking if he was okay and received an odd beckoning wave.   I skied back to him and found that he was on the phone.  This seemed a little odd until I realized he was talking to a 911 operator and trying to describe where he was.  I was immediate extremely glad I had stopped, since I had only seen one other car in the parking lot, and started to try to figure out what I could do to help.  He appeared mostly okay and described how he had caught his edge coming down the hill and slammed his leg into a tree.  The 911 operators wanted to talk to me so I got on the phone to describe the man’s condition.  Apparently with the adrenaline fading and a little pressure off the man knowing things were going to be taken care of his eyes rolled back and he promptly passed out.  I was yelling the man’s name and receiving absolutely no response.  I knew there was a house through the woods about a half-kilometer back so I tried to convince the operator this would be the best way to get to us since we were 25 min out on a 50 min loop.  Unfortunately, she had no idea what house that might be or where we were and did not what me to leave the man to get the address.  This meant the paramedic would have to navigate the long ski trail and would be a while.   Luckily the man regained consciousness after a long minute and said he thought he had just gone into shock.  He seemed stable enough now that the 911 operator let me go and find the house I had seen.   A confused lady open the door at the second house I tried, wrote down her address and then called 911 herself at my suggestion.  After returning to check on the man I returned to the house and lead some firefighter and a paramedic a ways through the woods and then down the ski trails.  I have to admit they seemed a little out of their element tromping through the woods in deep snow.  The man had to be carried on a board all the way out of the woods and it took us a while given the snow, brush and what not.  The paramedic seemed confident that he would be okay so I returned to my skis to complete my ski with a drastically altered perspective on safety.

I have learned a few very important lessons.
1.   It is possible to get seriously hurt cross-country skiing.
2.  Always stop and ask people if they are okay.
3.  Carry a cell phone.  Luckily he had one because I definitely did not.