A woman in her 20s has been rescued in a six hour operation in darkness after she plunged 10 metres down a mountain on Queensland’s Sunshine Coast.

The woman fell down the steep face of Mt Tibrogargan in the Glass House Mountains on Thursday night.

Drones with floodlights were used to light up the area as rescuers abseiled to her in a rescue which took six hours.

Drones with floodlights were used to light up the area as rescuers abseiled to her in a rescue which took six hours.
Drones with floodlights were used to light up the area as rescuers abseiled to her in a rescue which took six hours. (Queensland Fire Service)

Queensland Fire Service spokesman Ben Walker said it was the woman’s first time going up the mountain, which is in a national park.

“The path that she had taken up the mountain, I wouldn’t describe as hiking,” he said.

“It’s more scrambling, almost rock climbing.”

The rescue mission involved four separate abseil “stations” to get the woman safely back down to the ground.

Video footage showing the painstaking rescue has been released.

The woman suffered minor injuries to her hands and stomach but did not need hospital treatment. 

The incident has prompted a safety warning for wannabe climbers to be prepared.

“Certainly get out and enjoy the mountains, but be prepared to have the right sort of ability and equipment with you,” Walker said.

You May Also Like

Emma Thompson reveals Donald Trump asked her out on a date on the day she got divorced

By POPPY ATKINSON GIBSON, TRAINEE REPORTER Published: 12:56 EDT, 9 August 2025…

The Left Strikes Back to ‘Save Democracy’: We’re in the ‘Anything Goes’ Era of Politics

As a storytelling device, you always want to escalate the stakes:…

You’re using your dishwasher WRONG! Experts reveal the surprising items you should never put in there – including wooden spoons

At the end of a big meal there’s nothing better than being…

Scaring and Bullying Jewish Schoolkids Is on the Ballot This November

       “From the river to the sea” — shorthand…