Cohen Schaumann, 11, is recovering in the hospital after taking a 50-foot ground fall on April 21 while climbing at Smith Rock State Park with his grandfather, Scott Phillips.
Cohen had been top-roping with Phillips several times in the last year, and a few weeks prior to their April 21 outing, Phillips had taught his grandson how to rappel. 鈥淗e did everything right,鈥 Phillips said. 鈥淚 walked him through it up top, then went down below and put him on a fireman鈥檚 belay, and he rappelled perfectly.鈥
On this outing, he and Cohen were climbing at Rope-de-Dope, a large low-angle block with a smattering of easy routes popular for beginner climbers. Earlier in the day, Cohen had cruised a few 5.7s, but struggled a bit on a couple of 5.9s, 鈥渟o we decided to go around to the other side of the rock and climb this 5.8 crack (Rope-de-Dope Crack),鈥 said Phillips.

While Phillips went up to the top of the block (easily accessible via a ladder on the backside) to rig a top-rope anchor, he told Cohen to move their gear around to the base of the route. 鈥淚 was almost done setting up the anchor,鈥 said Phillips, 鈥渁nd I heard a noise, looked back, and there he was, standing behind me on top of the block. So I thought, 鈥業f he鈥檚 already up here, let鈥檚 have him practice his rappel.鈥欌
There are two sets of bolted anchors at the top of the route, one lower and one higher. Phillips had built the rappel anchor on the lower of the two. 鈥淚 had built a simple two-[point] setup. On one side I had one fixed sling with a locker on each end. On the other side I had non-lockers on each end.鈥 He鈥檇 clipped the rope in at its midpoint, dropped it below, and made sure both strands were touching the ground and unobstructed.
Once he noticed Cohen was up on the rock with him, he clipped his grandson鈥檚 PAS into the upper anchor, then rigged him to perform a traditional twin-strand rappel through an tube-style belay device. 鈥淚 had taught Cohen to always test the rappel before he pushes off,鈥 Phillips said, 鈥渁nd when he leaned back to do that, he couldn鈥檛, because it put tension on his [PAS].鈥
To mitigate this, Phillips had Cohen put his brake hand in position, and moved his grandson鈥檚 PAS from the upper bolted anchor to the lower bolted anchor (the same anchor where he鈥檇 built the rappel system).

Now Cohen leaned back on his rappel device, 鈥渁nd it looked good,鈥 said Phillips. 鈥淗is [PAS] was loose, the anchor was tight, and he had his full weight on the rappel device. I felt good about everything.鈥
At this point, Phillips climbed off the back of the block and ran down to the bottom to put his grandson on a fireman鈥檚 belay. When he left Cohen, his grandson had his right hand down by his hip, acting as his brake strand. But when Phillips got to the bottom of the wall, he saw that Cohen had at some point swapped the rope to the left side, and was preparing to rappel with his off-hand. However, besides that, everything looked normal. The rope was still properly run through the anchor and Cohen was still attached.

鈥淎t that point, I walked closer and loosely grabbed the ropes, and took my phone out to take another picture of him. Then I heard a yell, looked up, and he was coming down feet first.鈥 Cohen hit the wall midway down, 鈥渁nd his body turned, and then he went pretty much face first into the ground.鈥 Luckily, Cohen landed just a few feet away from a jagged rock pile, hitting flat, compact dirt.
A bystander with Wilderness First Responder certification was on the scene quickly, and a police officer with EMT certification arrived shortly after. 鈥淭ime was a blur, I really don鈥檛 know how long it [took],鈥 Phillips said, but he said that fairly quickly after the accident, Cohen was rolled onto a Smith Rock litter, transported to a truck, and heli-vacced to Bend, where he was stabilized, and later transported to Portland.
The 11-year-old suffered a broken pelvis, wrist, ankle, and ribs, two collapsed lungs, and a lacerated liver and kidney, as well as fractures in two spinal vertebrae. Miraculously, Phillips said his grandson is expected to make a full recovery. He was recently taken off a ventilator and has regained some mobility via a wheelchair, though he faces a long road of healing. A family friend has , which also contains regular updates from his mother, Sarah, regarding his condition.
Post-accident, Cohen and his rappel device were still properly attached to the rope when he landed, and the entire anchor system was intact on the ground with him, as well as his PAS, which was still clipped to him as well. 鈥淚 could see the whole anchor next to him, properly set up,鈥 said Phillips. 鈥淭he upper locker on one side of the anchor鈥攚hich had been locked and attached to the bolted anchor鈥攚as unlocked, but otherwise everything was completely identical to how it had been at the top of the route.
鈥淚n his inexperience and exuberance to rappel, I think he just unclipped the entire anchor along with his [PAS] when he went to rappel,鈥 said Phillips. He said he hasn鈥檛 wanted to ask Cohen directly about what had happened, not wanting to 鈥渓ead him on in any way.鈥
But Cohen鈥檚 father, Brandon, said yesterday 鈥渢hat Cohen told him he accidentally unhooked all the anchors [instead of just his PAS] when he went to rappel,鈥 essentially confirming Phillips鈥 suspicions.
鈥淚f I could go back, I would鈥檝e still had him rappel,鈥 said Phillips. 鈥淏ut either I would鈥檝e taken time to really remind him, 鈥Only undo this one [the PAS],鈥 or have a second rope up there and belay him from above as he rappelled, or have another adult with me. Those are the three ways I think I could鈥檝e mitigated the accident.鈥 Phillips said he wanted Cohen to learn to rappel normally first, and was planning on demonstrating the use of an autoblock to backup a rappel on one of their upcoming outings.
Cohen is the oldest of four siblings, two sisters (aged 10 and 6) and a brother (8), and is also supported in his recovery by his mother Sarah and father Brandon. 国产吃瓜黑料 of climbing, Cohen is an active kid, who enjoys jiu jitsu, skiing, hiking, hitting the pump track on his bike, and pretty much anything outside, said his grandfather. 鈥淗e just loves the outdoors, doing things鈥 just a kid with a lot of energy.鈥
His family, who lives in Redmond, a short drive south of Smith Rock, recently got a forge at home, and the homeschooled Cohen is now keen to get into knifemaking, as well. 鈥淗e鈥檚 got a real strong family unit,鈥 said Phillips. 鈥淸He and his siblings] get along, they back each other up, they fight for each other. If they get something, they want to share it with all their siblings, too.鈥 He told Climbing that there is no indication the accident has dampened Cohen鈥檚 spirits or enthusiasm for the sport.
鈥淚 can鈥檛 express enough my gratitude for all the climbers and first responders that got my son to a medical evacuation point,鈥 his father, Brandon, told Climbing. 鈥淭hey are a crucial reason why my son is alive today!鈥
鈥淢any of the activities we participate in are extremely rewarding but have inherent risks,鈥 he added. 鈥淲e always try to mitigate those risks, and you never think something like this will happen. Hopefully, we can help others avoid an accident like this鈥 [but] Cohen is an adventurer. I don鈥檛 think this setback will quell his love for the outdoors, learning, [and] exploration.鈥