psyculman
Member
Problems this past weekend.
https://www.usnews.com/news/best-st...-new-hampshire-dies-despite-helicopter-effort
https://www.usnews.com/news/best-st...-new-hampshire-dies-despite-helicopter-effort
It's always bursty, typical of a relatively low-frequency Poisson process. The last couple of weeks have been pretty busy; they just don't always spur discussion.Is it just my imagination or does there seen to be less accidents and rescues this year despite the big increase in hiker traffic? Seemed like a lot were happening early on in Spring and then it got relatively quiet.
Is it just my imagination or does there seen to be less accidents and rescues this year despite the big increase in hiker traffic?
rescues, mainly the dreaded "lower leg injury" or "turned an ankle" continue unabated in the Adirondacks. Some failure to adequately judge time an get caught out after dark with nothing more than a cell phone as a flashlight. I get the weekly DEC ranger reports and it is as busy as ever or more. As part of a state trained SAR team, we haven't been called to a SAR incident in a very long time because the rangers are able to resolve most all incidents, typically within a few hours or less. Unless it is a critical situation and it goes into a second operational day, we do not get to use our services. The advent of cell coverage and 911 downloading of location coordinates has surely changed the face of long term SAR activity.
I don't know, seems like they've had there share. https://nhfishgame.com/
I did not do FOT48 with the group I've been doing it with for years. They did South Twin. Heading out, 3 miles form the trail-head, one guy twisted his knee pretty bad from what I understand. At first he could not stand at all. With 3 miles and some river crossings, they decided to make the call. They were told that if they can help the person get out under his own power than they should do their best to do so. Because it would be hours before they could get there because they had 2 other incidents they were dealing with. I guess these were them. My friends managed to get him back to the trail-head around 7 is what I was told.
Is it just my imagination or does there seen to be less accidents and rescues this year despite the big increase in hiker traffic? Seemed like a lot were happening early on in Spring and then it got relatively quiet. Not sure if I just haven't been paying attention or if there is just no time for various SAR groups to post on Facebook, etc about their efforts or just general fatigue with the public for these stories so they aren't making the news.
It's always bursty, typical of a relatively low-frequency Poisson process.
Looked like a black hawk came in and landed at Concord later that day in the sunset. I took out the Fight Radar App to see where it had been, but unlike some other military flights, there was no civil aviation transponder track. As aside, the state police, Civil Air Patrol, and the air ambulance flights show up.
Oooo, a fellow geek!
Problem with most of those apps is if someone wants them filtered, you get anonymous info. or none at all. My go to, especially for military flights, is https://globe.adsbexchange.com/. It's based off of users' radio receivers to pick us anything with an ADS-B transponder running and has zero filtering.
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