Hypothermic hiker rescued from Little Haystack by helicopter

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I remember being semi-ridiculed for asking this question many years back when I first started Winter hiking. Seemed like a good idea to me at the time having one or two (or some fluorescent flagging tape) but that seemed to bring out the LNT extremists and their fear of permanently flagging routes. Several people mentioned taking these flags down when they find them, which could be potentially dangerous to the person relying on them. That stood out in my mind. Never wound up using either of them although once or twice I think I wouldn't have minded having a few with me.

Sometimes when I'm camping on a hike I'll hang a few tent stakes on a tree branch to mark my spot to turn into the woods off trail for my site when I go out after dark to tree line to take pictures. I use other landmarks like downed trees, rocks, etc but that reflective flash of the stake in my headlamp makes for a quick and easy location point.
A wand with a reflective tape as long as they are retrieved IMO is totally acceptable. Tying tape to tree branches is where it gets sketchy. Marking an entrance is a great idea if you are doing and out and back. Doing a loop like this hiker was doing is a bit different.
 
Not to go too far into the blazing topic of a few months ago on this forum, but... a blaze pole with a cross piece anchored in a cairn where the trail leaves open ledge and enters the thickets of dwarf spruce can do much to save lives of wandering hikers.
I encountered these poles anchored into cairns on Medicine Bow Peak in the Snowy Range this past fall. You can spot them at a considerable distance.
 

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