mookie
New member
i guess i am not like most people. i dont really want to know what trail conditions are like. will deal with it when i get to it.
interesting read though....
interesting read though....
Agreed.If you want to put a longer description, then (as Darren says), keep the comments short and write a trip report!
No.Can you even embed photos in trail conditions?
It's the same as a regular post, ie, pretty darn high. But if people start writing trip reports in trail conditions it will not be as useful. Please stick to some simple facts and details, limit embellishments.I have no idea what the text limit is, I've never maxed it out.
i'm the same way. i don't think i've ever read the trail conditions section, except if i see someone who i invited on a hike but they told me they were sick and staying home.. then i saw they actually lied to me and hiked somewhere else on the other side of the white mountains to avoid me and posted a trail condition report thinking i wouldn't be stalking them.i guess i am not like most people. i dont really want to know what trail conditions are like. will deal with it when i get to it.
interesting read though....
and i only wrote up one trail condition report in the year or so since i've been a member. but that was only because i wanted to brag because sometimes i think i'm all hardcore and stuff.
... if people start writing trip reports in trail conditions it will not be as useful. Please stick to some simple facts and details, limit embellishments.
i guess i am not like most people. i dont really want to know what trail conditions are like. will deal with it when i get to it.
interesting read though....
However, you can include links to your photos. I believe --M.'s basic point was that a photo may be worth many words. And yes, you could accomplish that with photo links.No.Can you even embed photos in trail conditions?
People yakking on phones in the mountains annoy me as much as anyone, and I've thought about leaving my phone at home on general principle, but I hike alone most of the time, often on under-hiked routes, and if I got in trouble -- or, more important, if I came across someone in trouble -- and was in an area with cell coverage but didn't have my phone, I'd never forgive myself.
I think I'm going to start adding cell coverage to my TCs, something like this that also notes signal strength and the carrier:
Cell phone coverage: Zero until just below Garfield summit (on the summit: up to five bars, AT&T).
Tyler, can you update the first post with any items that have been mentioned since the thread started?For those of us who carry cell phones for emergency-only
This may open a can of worms, but...
For those of us who carry cell phones for emergency-only use when we hike, a note in a Trail Conditions report about cell coverage would be quite useful. Coverage is very spotty in the Whites, as anyone who carries a cell knows, but there are regions where coverage is actually quite good (depending on the carrier).
I think I'm going to start adding cell coverage to my TCs, something like this that also notes signal strength and the carrier:
Cell phone coverage: Zero until just below Garfield summit (on the summit: up to five bars, AT&T).
What is the limit on the number of characters in a TC?
Tyler, can you update the first post with any items that have been mentioned since the thread started?
This may open a can of worms, but...
For those of us who carry cell phones for emergency-only use when we hike, a note in a Trail Conditions report about cell coverage would be quite useful. Coverage is very spotty in the Whites, as anyone who carries a cell knows, but there are regions where coverage is actually quite good (depending on the carrier).
People yakking on phones in the mountains annoy me as much as anyone, and I've thought about leaving my phone at home on general principle, but I hike alone most of the time, often on under-hiked routes, and if I got in trouble -- or, more important, if I came across someone in trouble -- and was in an area with cell coverage but didn't have my phone, I'd never forgive myself.
I think I'm going to start adding cell coverage to my TCs, something like this that also notes signal strength and the carrier:
Cell phone coverage: Zero until just below Garfield summit (on the summit: up to five bars, AT&T).
I recently stopped at the bottom of a spur path. Several people in another group were dropping their packs, and they were essentially 'good to go' because they had 2 cell phones in their pockets!I think cell phone users would be wise to turn them off until they are needed and be at the luck of the draw as to whether a signal can be obtained when needed ... and be prepared for the eventuality that it can't.
I've been in the company of hikers who lost power by keeping the phone on and at other times we've each had different luck, at the same location, in getting either a signal or a connection.
My conclusion is that including cell phone information is 1) of no interest to me personally, 2) can mislead others as to when and where to get a signal and a connection, 3) can mislead others into a false sense of security and perhaps inadequate proper preparation, 4) distracts from and clutters what should, IMHO, focus on the essentials of what draws us to the trails.
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