Missing hunters in Colorado

I have been following this post for days. I will never know these two hunters that perished in Colorado. However, they have made a difference in my life. I will be changing the way I hunt and think. I will be more prepared. I have been careless way too many times to count without much concern for myself or my family. I am realizing that I am not invincible. I will think of them if I ever get into a "situation" again.
 
Thanks, I have found more than a few places locally that I can and will buy some. I may never need or use them, But I will have them in several different places if the need arises. I think my life and well being is worth more than the few bucks they are going to cost me.
 
I was hunting in the same drainage that night. It was a hell of a storm and the temperature dropped quite a bit but it was not so cold that you couldn’t hike two miles to the truck. Everyone keeps talking about this like it was 10 miles in the backcountry in a blizzard. It’s not possible to be more than two miles deep in that bowl. There are some bad deadfall spots and I do not know exactly where they were or what was going on but there’s quite a few old logging roads, the main road running up the center, etc that make for fast traveling in there. You fight through a rough spot or two then you can move quickly. You’re never more than an hour and a half, two hours max from the truck. There is no real getting turned around in there. The terrain funnels you down. You’re either going up or you’re going back down to the road. Hunkering down and making a fire in a downpour is not a better decision in this case than walking two miles to the truck. Unless one of them hurt their leg bad enough that they didn’t want to hike out at night or something along those lines, I just don’t see it.

And before everyone argues with me about it, I was dumb enough to not throw any extra clothes in my pack that afternoon because I was going in to pack one out so I was in that storm in a Kuiu gila long sleeve and a Sitka kelvin active short sleeve hoodie. I was three miles from the truck and at no point in that night was I ever even close to thinking that I needed to stop and make a fire to save my life. what was going on for them to make the decisions they did. That being said, my initial reaction was lightning. Two phones, onX, InReaches, etc and not one message or location ping seems like lightning to me.

Regardless of what actually happened, it’s a shame two young men lost their lives out there.
To clarify, that was Friday night Sep 12th? You were packing an elk out in the same drainage ?

Did you see lightning and hear thunder that night there?


Thanks
 
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