DayTrip
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Not sure if this technically is a New England or General forum question but I am looking for a NH/New England specific answer so I'll start here and feel free to move as you see fit.
I am curious about the "protocol" for when a PLB should be activated and/or F&G notified of an "incident". In particular the documentation in my PLB states that "the activation of the beacon tells Search and Rescue who you are, where you are, and that you are facing a life threatening situation." Does that mean only when you are unable to continue on your own or just if you are in trouble? Or said another way, is an immobilizing injury the only valid criteria for PLB activation?
So let's say I'm out between Adams and Jefferson well beyond treeline. The weather was not great but has turned decidely bad and I have no clue where I am going anymore and the temps are plummeting. I am not injured and still have my wits about me but it is likely I am going to need to hunker down. Do I deploy my PLB so people know I am in trouble or should I wait until I am physically unable to continue due to hypothermia, gear failure, injury, etc?
Seems like a stupid question on the surface but I am curious how SAR and/or F&G look at this. In my hypothetical example above, let's say I break out the bivy, dig in and activate my PLB. But then two hours later the weather breaks and I am able to resume travel and find my way to safety below treeline. Can a SAR team follow the moving target that was my PLB activation? And how pissed off would they be if I did such a thing. Knowing I activated my PLB am I supposed to hang out in that location and risk a return to the life threatening conditions that prompted the activation in the first place?
But then on the other side of it, let's say in the same example above I hunker down and do nothing. After 6-8 hours of waiting nothing has changed and now I am hypothermic, without water and darkness has fallen. Fearing the worst (i.e. a life threatening situation), I activate my PLB. But the wait adds significantly to the time I am in danger and could cost me my life waiting for SAR to respond.
Or what if I don't activate my PLB but I am fortunate to get a text to my wife indicating I need to hunker down and can't travel. Should she contact SAR or F&G and indicate my present situation so they are aware of it and/or can decide for themselves if they should send a party out?
At the end of the day if I think I am screwed I am going to fire every bullet I have and explain why I'm a moron later, write a check, etc. But the other side of it is that others could be putting themselves at risk coming after me so I certainly would like to do what they are expecting me to do to make the process as smooth and reliable as possible. If anyone who is on SAR or F&G or knows of it's procedures can comment on the above it would be appreciated. Thanks.
I am curious about the "protocol" for when a PLB should be activated and/or F&G notified of an "incident". In particular the documentation in my PLB states that "the activation of the beacon tells Search and Rescue who you are, where you are, and that you are facing a life threatening situation." Does that mean only when you are unable to continue on your own or just if you are in trouble? Or said another way, is an immobilizing injury the only valid criteria for PLB activation?
So let's say I'm out between Adams and Jefferson well beyond treeline. The weather was not great but has turned decidely bad and I have no clue where I am going anymore and the temps are plummeting. I am not injured and still have my wits about me but it is likely I am going to need to hunker down. Do I deploy my PLB so people know I am in trouble or should I wait until I am physically unable to continue due to hypothermia, gear failure, injury, etc?
Seems like a stupid question on the surface but I am curious how SAR and/or F&G look at this. In my hypothetical example above, let's say I break out the bivy, dig in and activate my PLB. But then two hours later the weather breaks and I am able to resume travel and find my way to safety below treeline. Can a SAR team follow the moving target that was my PLB activation? And how pissed off would they be if I did such a thing. Knowing I activated my PLB am I supposed to hang out in that location and risk a return to the life threatening conditions that prompted the activation in the first place?
But then on the other side of it, let's say in the same example above I hunker down and do nothing. After 6-8 hours of waiting nothing has changed and now I am hypothermic, without water and darkness has fallen. Fearing the worst (i.e. a life threatening situation), I activate my PLB. But the wait adds significantly to the time I am in danger and could cost me my life waiting for SAR to respond.
Or what if I don't activate my PLB but I am fortunate to get a text to my wife indicating I need to hunker down and can't travel. Should she contact SAR or F&G and indicate my present situation so they are aware of it and/or can decide for themselves if they should send a party out?
At the end of the day if I think I am screwed I am going to fire every bullet I have and explain why I'm a moron later, write a check, etc. But the other side of it is that others could be putting themselves at risk coming after me so I certainly would like to do what they are expecting me to do to make the process as smooth and reliable as possible. If anyone who is on SAR or F&G or knows of it's procedures can comment on the above it would be appreciated. Thanks.