The hiking numbers seem inflated to me. I would guess that on a beautiful summer day in the Northeast there are thousands and thousands of people on the trails. Wouldn't we have a fatality every weekend with those odds? FWIW.
I tend to agree. Manadnock sees 125,000 visitors each year. The WMNF sees 6 million (though not sure what percentage of them are 'hikers'). If 10% of WMNF visitors are hikers, that's 600,000 hikers each year. NH does
not see 46+ hiking deaths each year.
I looked for the original sources of these numbers by following the references from the TGR article. The only articles cited are from the mid- to late-80's, are paywalled, and appear to not directly study 'hiking.' Instead, they study SCUBA diving or ski jumping and such and reference other (even older, possible completely irrelevant) articles to compare the risks of those sports with other sports.
In sum, at least for hiking, I would place little or no value on these numbers. It is, IMO, an exceptionally important topic and one I wish were better researched. In fact, I think it's worth talking about even if the data are only anectodal.
Here is my anecdotal data (oxymoron intended):
- I don't personally know anyone who has been seriously injured while hiking. I know several hundred hikers, I would estimate.
- I know (knew) personally one person who was killed while technical climbing, and another who needed to be medivac'ed out to save his life. I know perhaps 100 climbers.
- I know one person who was seriously injured mountaineering (Denali). I know a couple dozen mountaineers.
My summary: technical climbing and mountaineering are really dangerous. Hiking is not.
Your anecdotes may vary, and I would be interested in hearing from others.