dr_wu002 said:
It is, but I still think it's valuable to talk about it and make some sense of the issue. The first thing I thought when I read the report was, "oh, those F'ing idiots!!" (ref to: the ice climbers) but after reading this thread I found myself contemplating the incident more. Mudslinging is bound to happen -- it's nice when things can remain cordial -- but I think all of us should be mature enough to realize that each post is still just one person's opinion.
-Dr. Wu
JUST A THOUGHT....I like all the posts on this topic. I find them very "educational" and some are quite humerous.
I think that most of us have learned something from our own mistakes and from reading about those less fortunate.
As recently as August I came very close to needing a rescue because of my own carelessness. My friend and I laugh about this incident frequently, not because we think it was a big joke, but rather because we still can't believe we could have been so stupid!!! We certainly weren't laughing when it happened. I was greatly humbled by the event but still try to maintain a sense of humor.
I think sometimes we laugh at stuff that isn't all that funny, or we make silly comments because deep down we all know we could have been the big BOZO needing the rescue. In fact we are all still hikers who could potentially need to be evac'd out of some big mess caused by our own errors in judgment. Rob Hall and Scott Fisher losing their lives on their ill fated expedition to Everest are classic examples.
I read some of your posts and I laugh but i†'s because I've been there and know that I could have easily done the same thing. I'm not laughing at the victims misfortune but rather at how dumb I was and how I can still make some serious errors in spite of all the knowledge I have acquired over the years.
It wasn't so very long ago that my friend and I stood in the dark on the summit of Mt Cardigan unable to find the trail down in frigid cold temps and two feet of new snow. Had climbed that peak countless times in the summer. Never gave start times and turn around times a second thought. Completely clueless. I sure do pay close attention to the clock now.
There is little doubt in my mind that had I not summited the Rockpile via the Cog the very first time and spoken to the ranger on the summit I would most likely be forever memorialized on the "Deaths on Mt. W" board in the Observatory. I was invicible then and there wasn't much that I would not have taken on. Those warning signs about " above treeline travel" were not meant for me. They were for the old folks!
The "Everest" post was the best. It brought to mind the day my friend and I walked into a mountaineering store and asked the salesperson what we would need to summit Denali and did they have a map??? He couldn't speak for about*ten minutes. We left there with second thoughts about how we were going to spend our upcoming vacation.
I love SAR. If I were younger I would try to sign up. IMHO they are the best.
TOP DOGS!!! Thanks to all who risk their lives for us.