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Safety emphasized after back-to-back deaths at Yosemite

Nevada Fall in Yosemite National Park.
Nevada Fall in Yosemite National Park.
(Mark Boster / Los Angeles Times)
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Two deaths over the weekend in Yosemite National Park are serving as reminders for guests to exercise safety, park officials said.

The pair of weekend deaths mark the third and fourth accidental fatalities at the park this year, along with three natural deaths, said park spokeswoman Kari Cobb. The park typically sees between 12 and 15 deaths per year, with seven or eight considered accidental.

“It’s definitely hard,” Cobb said of the timing. “But we look at these as opportunities to teach visitors how to come to Yosemite to be safe.… It really does allow us to get that safety message even further than we would.”

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A busy weekend at Yosemite saw rare back-to-back fatalities after a man was swept over a 600-foot waterfall and another was struck by a falling rock while climbing El Capitan, officials said.

Numbers show that accidental deaths at the park are not up overall compared to last year, and officials stressed that two fatalities in one weekend is rare.

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“It’s not very often that this happens,” Cobb said.

On Saturday, a 19-year-old Sacramento man visiting the park with a church group stopped along the popular Mist Trail for a swim above Nevada fall, officials said.

Aleh Kalman reached a rock in the middle of the Merced River—about 150 feet from the edge of the waterfall—and was swimming back toward the bank when he was caught in a current and swept over.

Though Kalman’s body has not been recovered, park spokesman Scott Gediman said officials believe it was unlikely he survived the 594-foot drop.

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“It’s almost a 600-foot vertical drop; we do believe it’s impossible to survive a fall like that,” Gediman said.

The search was scaled back Monday after high water levels made the effort too dangerous, Cobb said.

“There’s too much water, the wind is too powerful, and the mist is too thick,” she said.

On Sunday afternoon, a 28-year-old London man died as he attempted to climb El Capitan, the granite monolith that towers over 3,000 feet above Yosemite Valley.

Felix Joseph Kiernan and his climbing partner were about 600 feet up the east buttress when Kiernan’s partner stood on a rock and knocked it loose, Cobb said.

The 1-by-2-foot rock fell about 150 feet before it struck Kiernan, officials said. Another climbing party below the pair used a cellphone to call for help, but Kiernan was pronounced dead when rangers reached him about two hours later.

The El Capitan death was the second on the popular climbing spot in as many weeks. A Montana man died May 19 after a rock dislodged and sliced his line, park officials said.

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Mason Robison, 38, fell about 230 feet before a second line stopped his fall, but he was pronounced dead when search-and-rescue teams reached him.

Cobb did not have numbers available for El Capitan fatalities, but said most climbing deaths or injuries result from problems with gear. Rock fall-related incidents are “very uncommon,” she said.

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kate.mather@latimes.com

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