Missing hunters in Colorado

I would be finding and interviewing the “hunters” that said they talked to them. They went back to original trailhead and left all their gear inside the car? Just a thought but maybe they should be looking at the other trailhead. I hope they find them and are ok but this just doesn’t sound right.
 
I've been out in 50 degree weather and chilled to the absolute bone in fog and light drizzle even with my rain gear on, it's no joke. I'd much rater have a foot of snow fall on me.
I was cow hunting in the rain last weekend. It was in the 50s. When we got done and back to the truck soaking wet, I could not get warm. I had a seat heater on and heat blasting for the 20 minute ride home. I got home and got dry and bundled up and it took another hour being indoors and dry to stop intermittently shivering.

Ive hunted in the snow in sub zero temps and never was cold like that. There is something to being wet and outside that just hits different.

I really hope these guys are OK.

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I would be finding and interviewing the “hunters” that said they talked to them. They went back to original trailhead and left all their gear inside the car? Just a thought but maybe they should be looking at the other trailhead. I hope they find them and are ok but this just doesn’t sound right.
It does seem weird. I was thinking they're either mistaken and it wasn't those two or they were misleading intentionally. Read somewhere that their truck had been moved though so maybe it's legit. Definitely need to squeeze them for more details if possible though.
 
If they could make fire they would have been out days ago, without it, hypothermia would get them the next day. I've been in a SAR chopper looking for a lost hunting partner and was told when hypothermia kicks in they hide from the rescuers, then saw it first hand. Darndest thing I ever saw and they had lots of stories of lost people they finally rescued that later said they hid under the bushes when the chopper came over.
Hoping for the best.
 
The sad thing is if they are injured or anyway incapacitated, they are archery hunters and in total camo and will be hard to see. Infrared will work if they are alive.

I hope they make it.
 
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If they could make fire they would have been out days ago, without it, hypothermia would get them the next day. I've been in a SAR chopper looking for a lost hunting partner and was told when hypothermia kicks in they hide from the rescuers, then saw it first hand. Darndest thing I ever saw and they had lots of stories of lost people they finally rescued that later said they hid under the bushes when the chopper came over.
Hoping for the best.
Believe they call it terminal burrowing. Same with paradoxical undressing. Odd things that people do in the final stages of hypothermia.

Whatever has happened, it had to have happened to both. If one was injured or something, I would think by now the other would have gone for help or at least gotten to some place they could be seen.
 
I was cow hunting in the rain last weekend. It was in the 50s. When we got done and back to the truck soaking wet, I could not get warm. I had a seat heater on and heat blasting for the 20 minute ride home. I got home and got dry and bundled up and it took another hour being indoors and dry to stop intermittently shivering.

Ive hunted in the snow in sub zero temps and never was cold like that. There is something to being wet and outside that just hits different.

I really hope these guys are OK.

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That happened to my daughter last week elk hunting with me. Got caught in a storm, neither of us got very wet, her hood on hoodie got damp but not soaked. I asked if she was ok and could see that she was getting cold but said she was fine. About 30 minutes later I see her shivering so I asked again and said she was fine so I gave it about 15 minutes and asked if she wanted to head back to camp and get a fire going...oh yeah let's do that dad I'm cold. She sat huddled around the fire a solid 2 hours before she stopped shivering. It was around 50 degrees that day but damp and foggy. We had a lengthy discussion about it back at camp on how serious hypothermia can be and how fast it will get you. If I remember right, someone correct me if I'm wrong but hypothermia can set in when it's 70 degrees, anything really below body temp?
 
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