sjhbos
New member
Just curious is the usual ‘give way to uphill hikers’ is affected by snowshoe usage by the parties involved?
Thinking back on my final winter hike of the 2012-13 season, a climb up Mt. Waumbek in March. It was a nice day, a light amount of snow on the ground that was hard packed and no snow forecast. At the parking lot I thought that snowshoes, micro-spikes or bare booting would have all been viable options. I wanted to travel light and fast and went with the micro’s and not snowshoes but as the day progressed I saw a mix of all three of these on the trail.
When descending I turned a corner and there were two hikers on their way up. We were going to cross each other at a narrow point in the trail, made narrower by the hard packed portion of the trail. As they approached I stepped off the trail so that they could continue their climb but on the unpacked portion of the trail, and without snowshoes, I sank down deeply into the snow. They stopped next to me, which I thought was to give me a hand up, but as they were now towering above me, it was used as an opportunity for them to tell me that I should take this as a lesson on the importance of wearing snowshoes with snow on the ground. I apologized and we each went on our way. Looking back on this I can’t help but think that if I was in the same situation again (descending a narrow trail on a hard packed snow without snowshoes and there is softer snow off the trial when I meet an uphill hiker in snowshoes) that I may be less inclined to ‘step aside’ for an uphill hiker.
So I guess my question is does a party who is wearing snowshoes have a greater expectation to step into the soft snow that is off the trail or are the snowshoes not relevant?
Thanks in advance for your comments.
Thinking back on my final winter hike of the 2012-13 season, a climb up Mt. Waumbek in March. It was a nice day, a light amount of snow on the ground that was hard packed and no snow forecast. At the parking lot I thought that snowshoes, micro-spikes or bare booting would have all been viable options. I wanted to travel light and fast and went with the micro’s and not snowshoes but as the day progressed I saw a mix of all three of these on the trail.
When descending I turned a corner and there were two hikers on their way up. We were going to cross each other at a narrow point in the trail, made narrower by the hard packed portion of the trail. As they approached I stepped off the trail so that they could continue their climb but on the unpacked portion of the trail, and without snowshoes, I sank down deeply into the snow. They stopped next to me, which I thought was to give me a hand up, but as they were now towering above me, it was used as an opportunity for them to tell me that I should take this as a lesson on the importance of wearing snowshoes with snow on the ground. I apologized and we each went on our way. Looking back on this I can’t help but think that if I was in the same situation again (descending a narrow trail on a hard packed snow without snowshoes and there is softer snow off the trial when I meet an uphill hiker in snowshoes) that I may be less inclined to ‘step aside’ for an uphill hiker.
So I guess my question is does a party who is wearing snowshoes have a greater expectation to step into the soft snow that is off the trail or are the snowshoes not relevant?
Thanks in advance for your comments.