A salvage operation began Monday for the airplane that crashed into a southern Utah lake in February and left Olympic wrestler Rulon Gardner swimming in 44-degree water and stranded on a remote beach overnight.
The recovery at Lake Powell was ordered by the National Park Service and will be paid for by the pilot's insurer.
"The Park Service has an interest seeing it removed because of the hazardous fuel and oil on the aircraft," Glen Canyon spokesman Kevin Schneider said.
Divers will attach cables before a winch-equipped, 44-foot catamaran lifts the small plane from a depth of 115 feet.
The Cirrus SR22 is largely intact and standing up on a sloping bottom, said James L. Cross Sr., a 30-year veteran of underwater salvage jobs who runs two marine companies from American Fork.
But it has an emergency parachute "that could cause us some grief" if it opens, said Cross, owner of Marine Projects Consulting Co. and Cross International Search and Recovery.
Cross and his crew were steaming Monday for Good Hope Bay, 28 miles from the nearest boat launch, where they planned to set moorings and anchors for their vessel and send divers to evaluate how to rig the plane with cables.
They were hoping to get the plane to the surface by Tuesday.
The crash stranded Gardner, 35, his pilot and another man on a remote shoreline Feb. 24.
The pilot, Randy Brooks, was flying low over Lake Powell on the Arizona-Utah border when the plane suddenly dipped and clipped the water's surface. It came to an abrupt stop and began sinking.
The three survived the crash with only bumps and bruises and managed to swim more than an hour in 44-degree water conditions that easily could have caused hypothermia in just half as much time, experts said.
After a night without fire or shelter, they flagged down a fisherman on a boat the next morning.
Gardner captured a gold medal at the Sydney Olympics in 2000. Two years later, he was stranded for a night by his snowmobile in subzero temperatures in the Bridger-Teton National Forest, about 15 miles from his hometown of Afton, Wyo.
He slipped into an icy creek several times. His body temperature fell to 88 degrees. He lost a toe to frostbite but survived.
Then, two years later, he survived a serious motorcycle accident in Wyoming.
- Dangerous silence: Why you need to talk to...
- Four killed in plane crash near St. George...
- Identities released in St. George fatal plane...
- West Jordan teen releases 5th iPhone app
- Several Utah high schools moving to 4-year...
- Holiday campers surprised by canyon snowfall
- Saturday showers temporarily halt HAFB air...
- Is this dress too short? Tooele teen gets...
- Is this dress too short? Tooele teen...
57 - Orrin Hatch is now the hunted —...
30 - Billboard battle heats up as company...
29 - Sarah Palin catches flak over her Orrin...
24 - Studies try to find why poorer people...
23 - How will Palin endorsement affect Hatch...
20 - Dangerous silence: Why you need to talk...
19 - Romney's veepstakes: Buzz builds around...
18






DeseretNews.com encourages a civil dialogue among its readers. We welcome your thoughtful comments.
— About comments