TaperPin
WKR
- Joined
- Jul 12, 2023
- Messages
- 3,231
Every year I talk with someone who is at high risk for getting into serious trouble if they are a few miles from camp, get in some bad weather, can’t figure out where they are, and have to at the very least make it through the night and not get killed by hypothermia.
I’m not picking on just out of state hunters, there are plenty of guys with years of experience that don’t make it home.
There’s one area I hunted a few times, and at one point you just turn right at the head of a certain creek and it takes you to a lake. Simple. I always have good topo maps and follow my path, but even following the map I missed the head of that creek. Then, maybe the next year, I backpacked in there for a few nights and missed it again. The third time I started to go the way that seemed right and caught myself. I used to take groups of college kids hiking and backpacking and that became a favorite place to teach route finding because it’s human nature to go the wrong way, and you‘re 4 miles in. It was really fun letting them get way off track and struggle enough they felt the seriousness, as well as the sense of accomplishment after working on the solution.
It’s no big deal when sunny t-shirt weather turns to rain - that’s what a high $$ breathable parka shell and pants are made for. When it drizzles the humidity is 100% and everything eventually gets damp, then a short stiff rain will get things a little wetter, maybe a short patch of snow that barely sticks and drops temps. On top of that you’re on the north east side of a big ridge and it’s getting dark quick, so instead of going up higher to glass, it looks easier on the map to go down a bit and cut across a few avalanche chutes then back up to save time. A soft snow rolls in and you can’t see the game trails as easily, or at all, so it’s bush whacking and slow, and now it’s dark. Maybe you went too far, maybe not far enough, but nothing is matching the map, it’s overgrown brush or shale slides and steep as hell in the chutes, and you’ve been sweating your ass off trying to hustle so insulating layers are soaked. Old batteries crap out. The list of small things that can add up is really large. You’re cold, you’re stuck for the night, hungry, and hopefully there’s enough gear to make a fire and not be Bob-the-popcycle by morning. . . . and yes, it’s not uncommon to find Bob-the-popcycle naked - it does weird things to your head. Don’t be Bob.
I’m not picking on just out of state hunters, there are plenty of guys with years of experience that don’t make it home.
There’s one area I hunted a few times, and at one point you just turn right at the head of a certain creek and it takes you to a lake. Simple. I always have good topo maps and follow my path, but even following the map I missed the head of that creek. Then, maybe the next year, I backpacked in there for a few nights and missed it again. The third time I started to go the way that seemed right and caught myself. I used to take groups of college kids hiking and backpacking and that became a favorite place to teach route finding because it’s human nature to go the wrong way, and you‘re 4 miles in. It was really fun letting them get way off track and struggle enough they felt the seriousness, as well as the sense of accomplishment after working on the solution.
It’s no big deal when sunny t-shirt weather turns to rain - that’s what a high $$ breathable parka shell and pants are made for. When it drizzles the humidity is 100% and everything eventually gets damp, then a short stiff rain will get things a little wetter, maybe a short patch of snow that barely sticks and drops temps. On top of that you’re on the north east side of a big ridge and it’s getting dark quick, so instead of going up higher to glass, it looks easier on the map to go down a bit and cut across a few avalanche chutes then back up to save time. A soft snow rolls in and you can’t see the game trails as easily, or at all, so it’s bush whacking and slow, and now it’s dark. Maybe you went too far, maybe not far enough, but nothing is matching the map, it’s overgrown brush or shale slides and steep as hell in the chutes, and you’ve been sweating your ass off trying to hustle so insulating layers are soaked. Old batteries crap out. The list of small things that can add up is really large. You’re cold, you’re stuck for the night, hungry, and hopefully there’s enough gear to make a fire and not be Bob-the-popcycle by morning. . . . and yes, it’s not uncommon to find Bob-the-popcycle naked - it does weird things to your head. Don’t be Bob.