Interesting thread. We all have our stories to tell...too many sometimes to be able to pull out just a few, but...
Yeah- Yellowstone..People are just
Crazy Stupid there. Everytime that I've been there, the sight of cars pulled over willy-nilly on the side of the road has been like an animal sighting alert, so I pull over, too....wait, I guess that makes me pretty stupid too!
Of course, I did get to see the Agate Creek wolf pack that way.
But I am not as stupid as to walk up to a Bull Elk in September (or anytime, though I hear that they are rather prickly just around rut time) just to snap off a few pix, as I saw one gent do. For that one I did stop to see if there would be any Elk on man violence
, but unfortunately nothing happened
. I guess that guy got to live and pass on his genius genes- so much for Darwin.
This next story is a doozy- and if you've heard it already my apologies...once I was on a Backpack and agreed to share my large tent with a "beginner" who did not have alot of equipment.
The first night, as we were setting down to sleep, my tentmate pulls out a large hunting knife
(OK, it was an average sized folding knife, but dosen't "large hunting knife", or better yet, a Bowie Knife, sound so much more dramatic?) and lays it on the floor between our sleeping bags. A little alarmed, I asked what was up with the knife. I was told that it was for protection, from bears and other sundry wild and murderous animals.
I picked up the knife and folded it up and handed it back to this person and said that the only animal that you might need protection would be from an angry tent owner (that would be me) with a hole in their tent or body.
Oh no...I think that this is me, again
. Being stupid, again
. Did I mention that I enjoy solo trips?
But seriously, all joking aside (...well, most joking aside), Once I was backpacking and a man hiking solo stopped and asked me a pretty stupid question- I thought he was joshing me, so I gave him a curt answer and moved on. Later it worried me that maybe the guy was out of it and I should have engaged him in conversation to evaluate his need for help.
Usually, though, I have quite a bit of patience for the hiker that I meet on the trail that asks a "stupid question", after all, I was once a novice and asked some pretty dumb things and I have even been accused of stupididty that I will own.
For stupid behavior I don't know what to say...I have seen things done by people that I would not do, and I am sure that I have done things that others would not do.
I just know that with any endeavor there is a learning curve that we all must go through...no speeding it up. Of course, if you've got experience, then there is no excuse and I have read of and been told of some real scary behavior and by really experience people.
Case in point... some years ago in an issue of the 46er magazine, a number of people submitted stories of past "adventures" that they'd had in the Adirondacks. One story, in a nut shell went something like this....
As a very experienced 46er, I took two novices on a winter ascent of Blake and Colvin. We got to the summit of Colvin and ran out of daylight, so I thought that it would be better to bushwhack in the dark back down to the Ausable Road. We got hung up on the cliffs that surrounds Lower Ausable Lake, but luckily we were able to find a rocky niche where we spent the night huddled before a fire (no equipment, of course, this was a day hike). We all survived, Cool!
Did I mention that I hike solo?
The guy who discovered the South Pole had some very interesting things to say about "adventures" . He tried to avoid them at all costs.