Dave Bear
New member
- Joined
- Dec 13, 2007
- Messages
- 681
- Reaction score
- 168
I came up through the notch Sunday afternoon around 4:30 and back down through at 6:30. The conditions were rapidly deteriorating at TH level and can only imagine what it would have been like on top. At 6:30 we ran into three full whiteouts in the single lane section where people would come close to a stop trying to find a well marked and plowed road. None of us would even want to imagine the panic that would set in quickly if we were on a somewhat knife edge ridge loosing the trail. Reports aside many of us may figure that we could get off the ridge quickly if something visible came in from the west. All too soon hypothermia would have its grips in you and play the major role in the outcome. "Stupid" in some posts here should be regarded as too harsh without being more informed and empathetic. Not so long ago posts went long and deep about brook crossings, turning back etc. Not being a member then I quitely sat back and listened knowing the day before we had averted tragedy by being overprepared. My hiking partner went through the ice over two miles out. Being forced chest first into the water and soaked through. Others had crossed the same spot but had no problems. If its never happened to you, the cold water cleans the wind out of you and cramps your long muscles. Within five minutes the clothes were freezing solid. We got her in a winter tent, in second set of clothes, in two sleeping bags with a torso warmer against her chest in half an hour. One hour later we were eating eye-of-the-round steaks drinking zinfindael and laughing about us floundering around in the brook. The next day was spent drying clothes and feeling blessed with good fortune and luck. Its too easy from a computer desk to judge preparedness or misfortune and would be bad karma. I feel how we approach the woods hiking in the winter is often the best education we can give others. If they see you headed for the ridgeline with a heavy pack and ask if your planning an overnight I often let them know I'm not planning just preparing! Traveling lighter or geared up is often a battle of judgement for me and a sign at the TH would remind me of times it paid off. Godspeed and sincerest sympathies to the victims, friends and families!