One man is suing a climbing guide and Canada’s mountain guide association for alleged ‘negligence and breach of contract’ that lead to a near-fatal climbing accident this summer.
In July 2021, Ian Manson of Whistler, B.C., planned to climb Mount Rogers in Glacier National Park. The 63-year-old mountaineer hired a local climbing guide with whom he could climb the peak’s multiple pitches.
According to a recent press release, the guide was belaying Manson from above when the guide tested a wobbly refrigerator-sized outcropping of rock. The test caused the rock to detach from the formation and fall past Manson, grazing him on the way down.
Upon seeing the rock graze Manson, the guide reportedly “let go of the rope causing the client to lose his balance falling backward. As the client fell, the rope paid out to its full length and then went tight pulling the guide off his belay stance, catapulting him into the air and down the face of the mountain.”
An account of the accident, as reported by Manson’s counsel at MacKenzie Fujisawa LLP, continues:
“The client was able to arrest his fall on a small ledge below. As the guide flew overhead of the client, the client was able to grasp the slack rope dangling from the guide’s belay loop. The client gripped the rope tightly to try [to] change the arc of the guide’s fall. The guide impacted the rock face within the length of the rope below the client so the client was not pulled off his ledge and the guide’s fall was terminated.”

A helicopter team for Parks Canada rescued the climbers after the incident. Both were then airlifted to different hospitals. The extent of either man’s injuries is unknown.
On Nov. 9, 2021, legal counsel for Manson filed a notice of civil claim in the B.C. Supreme Court. In it, Manson seeks compensation from the guide and the ACMG for “general damages, special damages, and costs” resulting from the guide’s alleged negligence.
Can We Learn From This?

- The climbing guide’s level of ACMG certification and prior experience.
- Mr. Manson’s prior multi-pitch climbing experience.
- Which route they were climbing, and where along the route the incident occurred.
- Whether the climbing guide was anchored to his belay station when the incident occurred.