Completely agree. .6 of a mile, nuts. Other than rolling hills, visibility on tundra is obvious and everything stands out like a sore thumb.That is crazy to think in less than 1.5 miles a dude just straight disappeared.
One would think with a grizzly attack there would be some signs. Torn clothes, blood, disturbed area, something.
I was wondering the same thing. Maybe he had meat in it and figured he'd leave it away from camp? otherwise it wouldn't make much sense to leave your day gear 1/2 mile away.....unless....he was faking his own death and needed a reason to get away.A question I would have: Why did he drop his pack just over 1/2 mile from camp on open tundra?
I think youre probably right. For some reason it just reminded me of a story I read years ago about a guy and his daughter who were trying to escape from a cult. They parked their car by some lava tubes in new mexico and people just assumed they had gotten lost in the caves and died when they had really never even gone in the caves.I think it would be extremely difficult to fake your own death and not have that discovered very quickly in those circumstances...unless you had help. Just seems unlikely.
Had no GPS mark on the pack location so he was hoping to spot it. Was the pack found intact and undisturbed?
Likeliest scenario to me is he didn't locate or recover the pack for some reason...got disoriented...walked the wrong way...further disoriented...and covered some number of miles before succumbing to accident, exposure or predation. Remains yet to be discovered. Camo clothing and probable deterioration or predation of remains could make discovery very difficult or unlikely from the air.
Less likely to me but possible: He intentionally contributed to his own disappearance and/or demise for unknown reasons.
First time I used a digital compass on my GPS, it was raining something fierce. My buddy and I both swore the pickup was this way even tho, our compass said complete opposite. We immediately dismissed the ( pos) digital compass and went the direction we both swore on. An hour later, none of the terrain looked familiar. So we decided to trust the digital compass, sure as shit took us straight back to the pickup. Lesson learnedThe use of a compass or nav device only works as long as you believe what it's telling you. If you're disoriented, confused or hypothermic it's very easy to disbelieve a device. I've seen guys totally discount a compass and walk the wrong way. The biggest mistake often made is to wait until one is completely disoriented before employing a device, and then not trusting what it tells you.
Likeliest scenario to me is he didn't locate or recover the pack for some reason...got disoriented...walked the wrong way...further disoriented...and covered some number of miles before succumbing to accident, exposure or predation.