
ebbd7bcc-b8b0-5f11-9a93-eb9f5cab720a • fnc • Fox News • fox-news/travel/general/national-parks • fox-news/us/us-regions/west/utah
Experienced hiker rescued after getting trapped in quicksand at Utah’s Arches National Park
An experienced hiker who became trapped in quicksand for hours at a famed national park in Utah on Sunday described the ordeal as “the closest I’ve ever come to dying.”
Austin Dirks, who has logged thousands of miles on hiking trails, told FOX13 Salt Lake City that he was trekking through the upper end of Courthouse Wash in Arches National Park just before sunrise when his left leg suddenly sank into what he thought was solid ground.
“I was able to pull it out, and then I shifted all my weight to my right foot,” Dirks said. “And I sunk up to the knee. It felt like I had stepped into concrete, and then it hardened around my leg. I couldn’t even move it a millimeter.”
Dirks used a GPS satellite messenger to alert authorities to his exact location.
COLORADO DRIVER WALKS AWAY FROM DANGEROUS 300-FOOT HIGHWAY CRASH WITH MINOR INJURIES: ‘A MIRACLE’
The toughest part of the ordeal, however, was waiting for their arrival.
Dirks said he persisted through 20-degree temperatures while stuck at a 45-degree angle for two hours until he saw a rescue drone fly overhead.
Drone video captured rescuers arriving in the canyon and working to free Dirks.
MOUNTAIN BIKERS FIND MISSING HIKER WANDERING WILDERNESS IN UNDERWEAR
“I realized that that’s the closest I’ve ever come to dying,” Dirks told the outlet. “I owe them my life.”
Dirks noted that before the ordeal, he had thought of quicksand as “more of a folklore or a legend” found in movies.
Real quicksand is very different from the dramatic portrayals of Hollywood. Quicksand is a muddy mixture of sand, water and sometimes clay that forms from rising groundwater. While the sand won’t support much weight, humans are too buoyant to sink completely beneath the sand.
“How it’s depicted on TV is nothing like it is in real life,” Dirks said. “The human body is more buoyant than the quicksand, so you’ll never sink to above your head.”
Experts say that leaning back in the quicksand can help distribute your weight and help relieve the pressure around your legs.
You may also like
By mfnnews
search
categories
Archives
navigation
Recent posts
- Gavin Newsom Laughs Off Potential Face-Off With Kamala In 2028: ‘That’s Fate’ If It Happens February 23, 2026
- Trump Says Netflix Should Fire ‘Racist, Trump Deranged’ Susan Rice February 23, 2026
- Americans Asked To ‘Shelter In Place’ As Cartel-Related Violence Spills Into Mexican Tourist Hubs February 23, 2026
- Chaos Erupts In Mexico After Cartel Boss ‘El Mencho’ Killed By Special Forces February 23, 2026
- First Snow Arrives With Blizzard Set To Drop Feet Of Snow On Northeast February 23, 2026
- Chronological Snobs and the Founding Fathers February 23, 2026
- Remembering Bill Mazeroski and Baseball’s Biggest Home Run February 23, 2026










Leave a Reply
You must be logged in to post a comment.