Thanks, I'll check this again in a few months. I'm updating a hiking guide for the Catskills, and so far, there is only 1 of 4 counties in the area that has any texting of 911, and it's only TTY.
I checked Tim's link and there is no 911-texting in the Catskills. I hope it will start soon, but it is county-by-county here, so it could take a while for all 4 counties to be on board.OK, guess it's not common knowledge. To me, gives me more insight on the reason for him reaching out for help on FB. Thanks, Tom.
That's pretty intense. Considering your last words to friends and family. That's firmly in Type III Fun territory, I think.
FWIW, unless it's a bluebird day or close to it, before I head above treeline on Lafayette or similarly committing peaks, I've got my compass around my neck, my map tethered to my wind pants, and my GPS on and clipped to the front of my pack straps. I'm not perfect or a particularly hard alpine man, but that strategy has little cost (provided you've already got the requisite items) and your chances of becoming lost are about as low as you can get them. Though I may add wands to my list for out and backs. What are others' strategies?
I found it interesting on Facebook that many people found a "map and compass to be useless in low visibility"
In general I agree with this statement, but I think it's quite context dependent. It feels a bit like saying, "The mistake was hiking solo in the winter." To continue on in deteriorating conditions certainly presents greater risk than turning around, but it's POSSIBLE the risk can be managed, depending on the individual circumstances. As an example, every single time I've attempted a Presi-traverse in the winter (I'm 0 for 6 for completing one, at this point) the conditions have eventually gone to crap. But we've often continued on into difficult conditions. We're also typically a team of 4 very fit, experienced individuals, we've typically got 2 dedicated GPS units between us, 2-4 VERY skilled map/compass users, and (at this point) a lot of experience with just about every bailout option. If conditions are bad, you can believe I'm on high alert for even the slightest additional challenge, but poor visibility and moderate winds by themselves are sometimes manageable.TCD said:The mistake was heading up into the bad condition, instead of turning around when it started to deteriorate.
Good info coming out now.
Overall, I agree with Mike P.: The mistake was heading up into the bad condition, instead of turning around when it started to deteriorate. Ideally, review and analysis would focus more on that than on how to deal with the problem once you are in it. Many folks do a good job of dealing with an emergency, and that becomes the focus, rather than how the emergency could have been prevented.
But back to the more popular topic: Once you are in the "zero-visibility"condition (let's say nothing can be seen past your outstretched hand), one other useful piece of equipment can be a long (100' or so) length of brightly colored nylon cord. If you are going cairn to cairn in zero vis, you can attach the cord to a cairn and string it out as you go. This allows you to pivot around and look for the next cairn; maintain a precise compass bearing by taking the bearing on the cord; and always be able to find your way back to the previous cairn even if tracks are gone. Disclaimer: I have read about this method, but I have not had to use it.
I don't see the "string" method as viable at all. Your going to carry 100ft of cord for the very slim chance you need it? Further more, there are not many places where you can find cairns in the winter that are 100ft apart. Your better off, learning how to read terrain and navigate, imo.
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