http://blog.nhstateparks.org/?p=2746
This piece reveals just how important it is to be able to bring oneself to turn around when things are worse than that for which one has prepared.
I went home Friday night rather than even bother with lousy Waumbek, not because I couldn't do it (it's a rainy day mountain), but because it clearly wasn't going to be fun. Yet the leaders of whatever group these kids were from saw the forecast and decided to head up Mt. Washington? The problem with this is that those adults just didn't think. They couldn't have, because just looking at the forecast alone should have told them Saturday was just not the day to bring young kids up that mountain. They're lucky those kids were able to make it up at all without succumbing to hypothermia. Even if they didnt' realize it at the base, they clearly understood the conditions long before reaching the cone and almost certainly could have followed the trail back down the mountain.
I'm sure I'm not the only one on this venue who has seen people heading up a mountain when it was clear they should be turning around. Wrong footwear, wrong clothing, no gear, too late, whatever. If nothing else, this piece drove home for me the importance of opening my mouth when I see someone heading into a situation when if they really understood what they were getting into, they would not be doing do.
Brian
This piece reveals just how important it is to be able to bring oneself to turn around when things are worse than that for which one has prepared.
I went home Friday night rather than even bother with lousy Waumbek, not because I couldn't do it (it's a rainy day mountain), but because it clearly wasn't going to be fun. Yet the leaders of whatever group these kids were from saw the forecast and decided to head up Mt. Washington? The problem with this is that those adults just didn't think. They couldn't have, because just looking at the forecast alone should have told them Saturday was just not the day to bring young kids up that mountain. They're lucky those kids were able to make it up at all without succumbing to hypothermia. Even if they didnt' realize it at the base, they clearly understood the conditions long before reaching the cone and almost certainly could have followed the trail back down the mountain.
I'm sure I'm not the only one on this venue who has seen people heading up a mountain when it was clear they should be turning around. Wrong footwear, wrong clothing, no gear, too late, whatever. If nothing else, this piece drove home for me the importance of opening my mouth when I see someone heading into a situation when if they really understood what they were getting into, they would not be doing do.
Brian