It is sad and tragic, and/but still hard to fathom why she went out that particular day on that particular hike. Unnecessary death.
The quote from her friend, copied below, was striking. But I just find it hard to believe. This storm system was WELL predicted. How could she not have seen the storm coming? Earlier in the article a ranger said the storm came in faster than expected. Even so, she (Matrosova) would have known that the weather was bound to be ferocious during some part of her hike, beginning, middle, later, it wouldn't have mattered. She should have stayed home that day, really. I get that she was brave and not an amateur. But it seems so preventable...very sad for her and her husband and friends and family.
The previous summit of Madison by her and her husband is also a key bit of new information. The rationalist libertarian streak in me says, "OK, fine, you're strong. Give it a try, just don't be stupid." As in, go up to treeline, check it out, and if it's brutal, turn back. Or even summit Madison and turn back from the hut. And I betcha that, if she hadn't done Madison before, strongly wanting and perfectly able to get Adams, but turning back for husband's sake, she might, on President's Day weekend, have said to herself, "time to head back" having gotten the first peak and observed the fierce and worsening conditions.
But having turned back from Adams before, she may have thought, "I'm getting Adams, at least, this time, I won't turn back from trying it again. It's not gonna stop me two times in a row." After all, she did evidently turn back from Adams's summit. And then, as she started to get out of Quincy Adams's lee, she got blasted and knocked over, and that was the end of it.
Note, by the way, that this new report of the prior Madison summit trip contradicts previous reports from SAR at the time two months ago that this was her first hike in the Presidentials. That could easily have happened as follows:
Husband to SAR: This is her first time to attempt this hike/a Northern Presidential traverse/Mount Washington from the north.
SAR to News Media: This was her first hike in the Presidentials.
Knowing that she had, in fact been there before and that her husband was familiar with the MWObs website and so she likely was, too, adds to the picture that's been gathered of her story.
I second the motion on "willful to a fault," but I have to say, I identify with her mentality more than I care to admit, it's just that her much higher level of capability than mine enabled her to walk into much deeper peril than my similar taste for adventure dares to hazard with my more modest skill set. Better lucky than good, sometimes.