Hey folks,
A quick shout out and big update to you folks.
First, to those well wishers:

And to those armchair quarterbacks:

Now, on to the dealio:
We took off from Pole Creek to do EMC. We came out of the trees a bit north of it and in the dark ended up just to the north on a small ridge above EMC. We stopped as the sun was coming up as there was a bunch of cloud cover activity. As the sun rose this seemed to dissapate, and we kept climbing after a very long break.
We hit the N. Ridge a few hundred meters from Glisan. The instant we went from the E. face to the W. it was a whole new ball game. Stonker styrofoam, dark and solid. We soloed under Glisan, up the bowling alley, to the summit.
I think it was the dark, bomber conditions on the W. face that helped sucker us in. It felt to me like 7:00 am, but must have been more like 10 or so when we summitted. By this time it was bluebird.
It was kind of steep in the bowling alley and we were looking for alternate routes down. We'd seen another party of 2 on Thayer HW, headed down. We could see avy debris from the morning that had released between their descent and ours.
Thought it should be clear after running a couple times....
So we dropped in. After around 1500' of downclimbing we hit the HW and were just starting to poke around for a rap anchor when a small slough just took off and grew pretty big in a few seconds. I had a chance to take a couple steps and it was on me. I dropped on my axe but it pulled me off instantly.
Then it was over the falls without a barrel, down the Thayer HW, inside the slide. I was under for this point and pretty freaked by the roller-coaster ride. During this time I felt my lower legs break. After the slope mellowed I got my arm out, then kind of just peeled the slide off and got my upper body out as it slowed down. I hadn't tumbled, but remained upright, just rotating from self-arrest to sliding on my right hip to sitting on my butt when I stopped. Nothing was burried except my lower legs.
I took stock and realized my left leg was "mildly" broken and right leg was tib-fib. I got my pack off and threw on my DAS, then started dealing with my leg. I tried moving the right foot to splint it but figured I'd wait a bit and see if the cavalry showed up, as it was a bit sensitive.
One partner had gotten pulled down with me and was a 150 yards or so uphill of me. I could just see her out of the corner of my eye.
The guys who didn't get caught immediately called 911 before starting to downclimb. Since they hit the other climber first they stopped and tended to her. They relayed her status to SAR via 911 and then one proceded to me and helped me splint the right leg. By this time LifeFlight had dropped 4 responders on the scene and headed out for another load. As they came in the cavalry arrived in the form of 2 blackhawks and a bunch of National Guard guys. There were probably 12 folks running around getting us prepped to lift. Before the Blackhawks showed they were lowering Nancy to ease the lift for LifeFlight, but then just dropped her in the basket and raised her in the Blackhawk. She was transported to Sisters, transferred to LifeFlight and off to St. Charles.
They flew me out in the second Blackhawk, transferred to an ambulance in Sisters, and off to St. Charles.
I was adamant about my gear, and talked both the EMT's and ER staff into taking my gear off the hard way. I managed to avoid destroying any gear.
Then into surgery, getting a plate on the right tibia, screw in the left fibula. Both legs splinted to recover from the trauma. Spent 6+ days at St. Charles with great care.
Now I'm back in PDX, cast on right leg, walking cast on the left. Total of 2 months in the wheelchair, then onto crutches. Looks like I may have some MCL damage on the left knee as well. Just had a MRI yesterday, don't know the results yet.
Overall a lot of good luck and hard work on the part of SAR, LifeFlight, Nat'l Guard, Sisters sherrif and rescue squad. Thanks to all those folks who assisted in getting our butts out of there so quickly. Also another big thanks to the staff at St. Charles and all those who have rushed to help me out.