Haunting words 14-year-old son said as he hallucinated, walked off 120-foot cliff in front of terrified father

Haunting words 14-year-old son said as he hallucinated, walked off 120-foot cliff in front of terrified father

A 14-year-old California boy walked off a 120-foot cliff in front of his horrified father — telling him he saw “snowmen and Kermit the frog” while hallucinating from altitude sickness.

Zane Wach is now in a medically induced coma from the fall on Mount Whitney in the Sierra Nevada mountain range on June 10 that left him with severe head trauma, as well as a broken ankle, finger and pelvis, according to SFGate.

The frightening events unfolded as the pair made their way down the mountain, but dad Ryan Wach initially had no doubts about his son’s ability to handle the hike.

“He’s in better shape than I am,” Wach told the outlet, adding that his son had hiking experience and was an active teen who competed in distance running, swimming and triathlons.

Zane Wach was placed in a medically induced coma after walking off a cliff while suffering from altitude sickness.GoFundMe
“The idea was that this would be kind of like his introduction to mountaineering.”

However, as the father and son were on the journey up the mountain, Zane slowly started exhibiting symptoms of altitude sickness, his father said.

Wach noticed his son was having issues, but they had already finished the toughest parts of the hike. He decided to take an easier trail to ensure a safer seven-mile descent back to their car.

The 14-year-old suffered severe head trauma from the fall and remains in a medically induced coma. Zane also broke an ankle, a finger, and part of his pelvis.GoFundMe

But as they were heading toward the trailhead, Wach said Zane started to “experience some hallucinations.”

“He knew he was hallucinating,” Wach said. “He said he saw things like snowmen and Kermit the Frog.”

Wach said he was keeping a close eye on his son as they made their way down the trail and noticed that he looked “considerably better.”

About an hour later, however, Zane again started acting strangely and began doubting “reality.”

“My best guess is a combination of exhaustion, sleep deprivation, probably some dehydration, and lasting effects from the altitude sickness. But he essentially started to doubt reality.”

As they continued their trip down the trail, Wach said they had to stop after Zane told his father they had “already finished the hike multiple times over.”

“It was completely bizarre,” Wach recalled.

“He told me he couldn’t tell if he was dreaming or not, and he would shake his head in disbelief, like, ‘This is not real.’ Like he was in the movie ‘Inception’ or something.”

Zane’s deteriorating state of mind prompted a separate group of hikers nearby to call for a search and rescue team to get him down the mountain.

Zane’s father, Ryan, said his son started acting strangely and began doubting “reality.”GoFundMe

However, around that same time, things went from bad to worse with Zane’s behavior, his father said.

“He was worse than before,” Wach told the Independent. “He almost seemed like he was sleepwalking. He started dragging his feet and stopped in his tracks,” Ryan said. “He didn’t want to go on.”

Wach said his son started making erratic movements toward a ledge near the trail with a steep, jagged slope, but he grabbed him before he could go over.

The 14-year-old told his father that he was going to the car — despite it being several thousand feet below their current location on the mountain.

Later, he tried again to move toward the slope but was stopped by Wach, with Zane now telling him that he was trying to get “dinner.”

Wach felt overwhelmed trying to keep Zane safe and became emotional, tearing up and briefly letting him go.

“I had to wipe away tears. I was holding my hands to my eyes, and he walked off again,” Wach told SFGate.

“This time, I didn’t hear it until he was about at the edge, and when I went to reach for him, he was 10 feet away from me. I couldn’t get him, and he walked off the edge.”

Zane fell an estimated 120 feet down the slope before hitting the ground.

Zane’s deteriorating state of mind prompted a separate group of hikers nearby to call for a search and rescue team to get him down the mountain.GoFundMe

Wach said he bolted down the slope to get to his son when a nearby hiker, who happened to be an EMT, noticed what happened and started helping with the rescue efforts.

Zane was left on the slope for about six hours as the Inyo County Search & Rescue teams worked to get him off the mountain.

He was airlifted to Southern Inyo Hospital in Lone Pine, and later flown to the nearest pediatric trauma center, Sunrise Children’s Hospital in Las Vegas.

However, given the extent of the fall, doctors at Sunrise said it was “fairly miraculous” that he wasn’t injured further, his father told the outlet.

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