The article said: "The map we published last month shows that the site of the remains was a short distance from an old boot-shaped logging trail, also called a tote road."
Most bushwhackers know that you can be quite close to something in dense growth spruce forest and not see it.
The article said: "Though it’s overgrown compared to the Railroad Road — the tote road she would have crossed shortly before encountering the boot-shaped trail — it is significant and recognizable enough to warrant being marked on a map."
My comment: The author is most definitely not familiar with the age of the topo maps and the variation of trails shown vs current conditions. I can not confirm if this trail is clear or even noticeable, and I doubt the author knows first hand either. It might be, or might not. And if she followed this trail and became tired, I would guess she would stop and camp right on the trail or within a few feet. The location where she was found was off the trail.
The article said: "Wardens have thus far resisted even acknowledging that this boot-shaped tote road is the path closest to where Largay’s remains were found. But if they were aware of this old logging trail — and, again, it’s right there on a publicly available topographic map — why wasn’t it searched within a day or two of the Wednesday, July 24 report that she’d gone missing after traveling that section of the A.T.?"
I remember seeing the posted consolidated searcher tracks and they showed one passing close to the location where she was found. Not sure of the date/time of that track but it was clear to me that they where in the area. And for me it would have been frustrating to see how close they were to here and missed her
The article said: "Did an entire week or more pass before authorities searched that boot-shaped tote road? The wardens’ comments thus far seem to indicate that was the case. If it was sometime in August before that area was searched, what could possibly account for the delay? The terrain in this area is not challenging; it would require no special skills to search there."
If the road is open, then this could be a valid point. My first response would have been to check the obvious old trails heading off the AT. Again, someone could have walked that old trail and not seen her