Bree Loewen is the author of “Found: A Life in Mountain Rescue” and a 20-year veteran of search and rescue in the Pacific Northwest. (Submitted photo)

Bree Loewen is the author of “Found: A Life in Mountain Rescue” and a 20-year veteran of search and rescue in the Pacific Northwest. (Submitted photo)

‘Found’: Author and climber a 20-year veteran of mountain rescue

In her second book, Bree Loewen shares her experiences of volunteering with Seattle Mountain Rescue.

  • By Charlie Lieu Washington Trails Association
  • Sunday, September 24, 2017 8:46am
  • Life

By Charlie Lieu / Washington Trails Association

If you ever have the pleasure of meeting Bree Loewen, you will not be surprised to learn that she is a leader for Seattle Mountain Rescue. Her athletic build and confident demeanor are what you expect from someone who regularly extracts the injured or lost from dire situations.

What may surprise you is that despite her youthful complexion, Loewen is a 20-year veteran of search and rescue in the Pacific Northwest. Within her tall, sinewy frame, Loewen carries countless tales of rescues ranging from wrapping sprained ankles in the rain to multi-day body recoveries in the remote winter wilderness.

Path to mountain rescue

Loewen was homeschooled — a somewhat lonely experience — and graduated from the University of Washington at 17. She spent her early adulthood living out of her car and climbing. The freedom was liberating, but she longed for deeper connections. Having been part of a youth search-and-rescue group in the late 1990s, Loewen re-entered the world of mountain rescue in 2002 for the National Park Service.

The work was appealing: the sense of purpose, the challenge, the phenomenal people and the intense bonds formed from shared experiences. Eventually, though, she wanted to return to Seattle and start a family, so she switched to volunteering with Seattle Mountain Rescue.

Loewen isn’t sure how many missions she has completed, as records weren’t always perfect in the early days. The SMR database shows that she has responded to 100 calls in just the last three years, and altogether, Loewen has probably helped rescue at least 500 people.

Hidden challenges

To describe mountain rescue as “demanding” is an understatement. In addition to maintaining peak physical condition, Loewen must continuously refresh a complex cadre of skills, such as rock and ice climbing, rock and crevasse rescue, and backcountry skiing. She maintains her license as an emergency medical technician, and she’s in nursing school to increase her skill set.

Loewen’s planned training focuses on “hard” skills that are well defined and measurable, but she points out that soft skills are just as crucial.

“People underestimate how important it is to be able to read people and communicate clearly: with teammates, with partner agencies …” Loewen said, with a warm and casual tone honed from years of having to make strangers feel comfortable under suboptimal conditions. “(You have to) instill confidence in the person you are helping and keep their partners calm so they don’t become a liability.”

Loewen confesses that “rescue work takes a toll on you, not just physically, but mentally and emotionally.” Risking your own safety for complete strangers is tough, and having to deal with injury or death regularly changes your perspective. “You see someone fall from a wall you climb at all the time; you can’t help but second guess how safe it is,” Loewen said.

As a woman in a traditionally male-dominated field, Loewen sometimes faces cultural challenges. While members of Seattle Mountain Rescue are egalitarian, meritocratic, and focused on gender parity, partner organizations in some areas are not always used to working with women. This is where Loewen’s soft skills shine through: anticipating and managing preconceived notions of ability and aptitude.

“When I know I have to deal with a team or an agency that isn’t used to working with women, I get in front of it by having one of the older gentlemen in Seattle Mountain Rescue call ahead to make sure everything will go smoothly and there are no surprises,” she said.

Despite all the hard work and the occasional suffering, Loewen’s enthusiasm for mountain rescue is undiminished.

“Every mission is an amazing shared experience with your teammates,” she said. “You bond over the challenges, and it’s all worth it when you get someone to safety.”

Found: A life in mountain rescue

In addition to her intense work as a search-and rescue leader, Loewen is an author. Her second book, “Found: A Life in Mountain Rescue,” is a collection of stories from her life in Seattle Mountain Rescue. The book chronicles Loewen’s experiences as she recounts tales of camaraderie, joy and, yes, suffering.

Mountain rescue is a critical part of Loewen’s life and takes center stage in everything she does. Unfortunately, such consuming volunteer work makes a “traditional” career path difficult. “Found” explores this struggle, juxtaposed with the ease with which Loewen navigates the mountains. Interspersed between the rescue stories are glimpses of her own personal journey in search of a professional path that made sense, while balancing the meaningful but unpaid roles of wife, mother and mountain rescuer.

Puget Sound locals will recognize details from popular local hikes like Rattlesnake Ledge and Mount Si. However, the feeling of familiarity comes also from Loewen’s expressive and vulnerable writing style. Her honest assessments of her own trials and tribulations make her instantly relatable — even if very few of us would ever knowingly venture as far as she does into the depths of the wilderness under the most challenging of conditions.

For anyone who has ever felt a bit lost, either literally or metaphorically, “Found” will strike a chord.

“Found” is available from Mountaineer Books’ website, www.mountaineersbooks.org, and in bookstores.

Washington Trails Association is the nation’s largest state-based hiking advocacy nonprofit. WTA promotes hiking as a way to inspire a people to protect Washington’s natural places through collaboration, education, advocacy and volunteer trail maintenance. Get inspired to go hiking and learn how you can help protect trails at www.wta.org.

In need of help

In Washington state, if you’re rescued from the trails, you won’t get a bill. That is because search-and-rescue operations are primarily volunteer driven. But rescues aren’t free. Rescue organizations have to pay for gear, gas, equipment and more.

Given the critical work they do, and their chronic resource shortage, consider donating to or volunteering for a mountain rescue unit in the state.

Everett Mountain Rescue, serving Snohomish County since 1954, is an all-volunteer organization of climbers that saves lives through rescue and mountain safety education. It is an accredited Mountain Rescue Association team and is one of the association’s founding members.

Team meetings are held at 7 p.m. on the first Monday of the month at Taylor’s Landing, 5506 Old Machias Road, Snohomish. Mountaineers interested in joining are welcome to attend. You must be at least 18 years old. For more information, go to http://everettmountainrescue.org.

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