I thot you all might enjoy this article. I rec'd an email on it from one of the Meet Up groups I belong to:
http://www.phoenixmag.com/travel/hiking ... 07/lost/1/
It's about Don Capron's adventure last December.
"Lost" hiker article from Phx magazine
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tibberGuides: 21 | Official Routes: 51Triplogs Last: 49 d | RS: 533Water Reports 1Y: 0 | Last: 786 d
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"Lost" hiker article from Phx magazine
For me, sometimes it's just as much about the journey as the destination.
Oh, and once in awhile, don't forget to look back at the trail you've traveled.
Oh, and once in awhile, don't forget to look back at the trail you've traveled.
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BobPGuides: 2 | Official Routes: 17Triplogs Last: today | RS: 58Water Reports 1Y: 4 | Last: 234 d
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Re: "Lost" hiker article from Phx magazine
Good read... thanks for posting it.
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Always pronounce Egeszsegedre properly......
If you like this triplog you must be a friend of BrunoP
Always pronounce Egeszsegedre properly......
If you like this triplog you must be a friend of BrunoP
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big_loadGuides: 0 | Official Routes: 1Triplogs Last: 600 d | RS: 3Water Reports 1Y: 0 | Last: 2,489 d
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Re: "Lost" hiker article from Phx magazine
I'm glad he made it OK. Crossings that deep and that cold are a serious risk, especially in flood water. He might have been better off to wait a day or two, even if he were low on food.
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azdesertfatherGuides: 16 | Official Routes: 22Triplogs Last: 7 d | RS: 18Water Reports 1Y: 4 | Last: 105 d
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Re: "Lost" hiker article from Phx magazine
Quoting an excerpt of this article:
How many of you would tend to "push on" alone when you lose trail?
He was more gutsy than me. When I am hiking alone and run out of trail, if I'm not totally confident with what I'm doing, then I start playing the "what if" scenarios like what he ended up actually enduring. I am then quick to swallow my pride, chicken out, and retrace my steps, even if it means calling it quits.He knocked out a three-hour, hand-over-hand scramble up 2,000 craggy feet to the top of a mountain ridge along Bull Basin Trail No. 270. But once atop the ridge, he lost the trail. “Either the switchbacks marked on the map did not exist and the map was wrong, or I simply could not locate them. I was determined to find out,” he says.
He had reached the turnaround time for his hike, and he did have those brownies to bake. But he refused to be beaten. “I didn’t want to admit defeat… it was the idea of giving up, the idea of quitting that I couldn’t stand,” he says.
So Capron continued on, losing daylight and losing confidence in his map.
How many of you would tend to "push on" alone when you lose trail?
"I went to the woods because I wished to live deliberately, to front only the essential facts of life, and see if I could not learn what it had to teach, and not, when I came to die, discover that I had not lived." — Henry David Thoreau
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azdesertfatherGuides: 16 | Official Routes: 22Triplogs Last: 7 d | RS: 18Water Reports 1Y: 4 | Last: 105 d
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Re: "Lost" hiker article from Phx magazine
BTW, thanks tibber for the article. Your link actually starts you out on page 2, though. To start at the beginning of the article, use this link:
http://www.phoenixmag.com/travel/hiking ... 907/lost/1
http://www.phoenixmag.com/travel/hiking ... 907/lost/1
"I went to the woods because I wished to live deliberately, to front only the essential facts of life, and see if I could not learn what it had to teach, and not, when I came to die, discover that I had not lived." — Henry David Thoreau
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joebartelsGuides: 264 | Official Routes: 226Triplogs Last: 5 d | RS: 1962Water Reports 1Y: 14 | Last: 14 d
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Re: "Lost" hiker article from Phx magazine
Too many variables and not actually being in the situation to say.dshillis wrote:How many of you would tend to "push on" alone when you lose trail?
I edited the link to page #1
- joe
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azbackpackrGuides: 27 | Official Routes: 23Triplogs Last: 83 d | RS: 0Water Reports 1Y: 0 | Last: 776 d
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Re: "Lost" hiker article from Phx magazine
So, I don't know that area, but some of you may. Why did he lose the trail? Is it overgrown, do you think he missed a turn, etc??
There is a point of no return unremarked at the time in most lives. Graham Greene The Comedians
A clean house is a sign of a misspent life.
A clean house is a sign of a misspent life.
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tibberGuides: 21 | Official Routes: 51Triplogs Last: 49 d | RS: 533Water Reports 1Y: 0 | Last: 786 d
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Re: "Lost" hiker article from Phx magazine
Thanks, obviously I was reading page two when I posted the link.I edited the link to page #1
I think this article points out many things including the value of knowing your limitations, not letting your ego get in the way and remember that you can always come back.... especially after considering the "what ifs" mentioned by dshillis.
Snakemarks and I are headed to Haunted Canyon this fall as I am sure many of you are so be safe out there. And for those of you who hike alone; be sure and let someone know where you are. Better yet, there are probably lots of people out there to hike with and it's generally a lot more fun than hiking alone.
For me, sometimes it's just as much about the journey as the destination.
Oh, and once in awhile, don't forget to look back at the trail you've traveled.
Oh, and once in awhile, don't forget to look back at the trail you've traveled.
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big_loadGuides: 0 | Official Routes: 1Triplogs Last: 600 d | RS: 3Water Reports 1Y: 0 | Last: 2,489 d
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Re: "Lost" hiker article from Phx magazine
It depends. I'll go cross-country if I'm certain of where I am, the route looks feasible on the map, and the landscape agrees. However, I have no qualms about backtracking. Backtracking will save your bacon like nothing else.dshillis wrote:How many of you would tend to "push on" alone when you lose trail?
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Re: "Lost" hiker article from Phx magazine
I noticed the fact that he ignored his self-imposed turn around time. That's a pretty hard and fast rule when I establish one, more so than going cross-country. I'm glad he and the dog made it out though. Great read.
mike
"Solvitur ambulando" or maybe by brewers.
"Solvitur ambulando" or maybe by brewers.
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