egilbe
Member
22 miles is a damn ambitious hike for Winter conditions. Sad story.
Wow, I was thinking that a solo hike to Bondcliff was a reasonable risk for solo winter hikers as the exposure is limited. Potentially adding in the extra couple of hours to go to Bond and West Bond plus the full out exposed stretch between Bond and Bondcliff with a forecast of a front coming through with high winds and low temps that is a different story. Definitely prime conditions for Hypothermia.
I've done the Bonds/Zealand (Or Zealand/Bonds) traverse four times in winter/winter conditions and always find it less about mileage for a fit hiker(even with Zealand Rd closed) the bulk of the hiking is easy, relatively low overall elevation gain, but the open ridge between Bond and Bondcliff being the biggest trouble spot (followed by the col between Zealand and the Twinway turn that's often hard to follow if unbroken).
YMMV. Timing is everything.
The deceased could have been experienced and had adequate equipment and still been caught by hypothermia. Its insidious, and can sneak up quick. Many particularly physically fit folks can keep up a good hiking pace and end up with minimal gear on as they are generating enough heat that they don't need much gear on. Once out of the woods on Bondcliff, there is zero cover, if you don't gear up in the woods in advance of breaking treeline in high winds, getting additional gear on is very difficult. In cold weather the first thing lost with hypothermia is clear thinking followed quickly by loss of control of the extremities. A hiker can have a pack full of warm gear but if they cant open the pack because they cant open the buckles, that gear is useless. I and many others carry gear in ziplock bags inside the pack. In extreme conditions (high winds and cold) I have gone from warm to unable to open a ziplock bag due to loss of dexterity in less than 5 minutes, I ended up having to tear the ziplock bag open with my teeth. Putting on a jacket in high winds and cold can be quite a challenge if not impossible and with the claimed 10 to 15 degree below temps and high winds I expect that it was just a matter of minutes before a few missed tries turns into a survival situation. I expect a driver in this situation is that the hiker was probably working on a list and had just hiked for several hours getting just short of the summit, in what was pretty good winter hiking conditions (minimal snow). I expect the temptation is to go that last 1/4 of mile to check off the summit rather than coming back another time was high. Add in mild hypothermia and its a dangerous combination.
Generally solo winter hiking introduces additional risk to an inherently risky sport, it can be managed like other winter risks. A Fish and Game official at one point made a blanket statement that solo winter hiking was inherently reckless. I don't agree I personally solo winter hike but get decidedly conservative. I know of a few times where I have had to help another hiker and have been helped by another individual when I have been unable to get gear on. One of my standard comments on what constitutes a hiking partner versus someone I am hiking with is that a hiking partner is someone who I have hiked with and we both mutually agreed to turn around short of summit.
22 miles is a damn ambitious hike for Winter conditions. Sad story.
It sounds to me he was an experienced Summer hiker. Winter is an entirely different beast.
Mohammed's Bonds in a Day, which ended up as a 26 hour hike. I had done some hiking with another member in that group and Mohammed may have even sugar coated it a bit.
Is there a Trip Report for this famous hike lurking in the archives somewhere? It sounds epic.
Enter your email address to join: