Public Media for Alaska's Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

Two Men Drown In Open Water Near Tuluksak; One Body Recovered

Search and Rescue volunteers pulled snowmachines from an open hole in the Kuskokwim River ice near Tuluksak, where two men, Peter Sallaffie and Joseph Hale, drowned on Jan. 1, 2021.
Mark Leary
/
BSAR

The first body of the pair of snowmachiners lost in the Kuskokwim River on Jan. 1 has been recovered; although the body has not been identified.

Two men, Peter Sallaffie and Joseph Hale, drove into an unmarked open hole in the ice near Tuluksak. The loss marks the first deaths to open water along the Kuskokwim River this winter.

The two men lived in Bethel and had snowmachined to Tuluksak to visit a relative, according to Bethel Search and Rescue President Mike Riley. Upon leaving Tuluksak the two men took the wrong trail, the hovercraft trail instead of the snowmachine trail, and drove into open water.

“They picked up the wrong trail at the mouth of Tuluksak river," Mark Leary, with Bethel Search and Rescue, said. "And you know, it’s not hard to do the first time traveling an area, especially in the dark. They picked up the wrong trail, and they headed into an area of unmarked open water, and they were lost.”

Members of Tuluksak’s COVID-19 team witnessed the accident, but by the time the team reached the open water, neither Sallaffie nor Hale could be seen. The search was initially hampered by the lack of experienced hands. Leary said that all of the experienced search and rescue personnel were hunkered down because of COVID-19, or too closely related to the two men who were gone to participate in the search. The crew that came from Tuluksak to help were young people. During the day, Leary said that they watched and helped as volunteers used a boat to try to find the missing bodies.

“All we had available at the time was one beat-up old boat, maybe a 16-footer, no motor," Leary said. "And the line is run from the boat to a snowmachine. And the snowmachine goes backwards and forward, moving the boat up and down the open hole, while a pair of searchers run hooks in the water.”

The snowmachines were easy to find. Both were pulled from the water the day after the accident, on Jan. 2. During the long weekend effort, Leary said that the young, inexperienced crew from Tuluksak watched, learned, helped, and took leadership.

“[Sunday] night, just before dark, those young guys recovered the first lost one. They did it and I’m very proud of them. I know they know now that they can do it," Leary said.

The search continues for the second body, and Leary said that the crew could use help.

As of this weekend, the large open hole near Tuluksak has been marked with blue reflective tape. Earlier this season, Bethel volunteers marked all known open water between Bethel, upriver to below Akiak. Leary and Riley encourage all communities to mark open water near their villages.                                

Anna Rose MacArthur served as KYUK's News Director from 2015-2022.
Related Content