When do you leave your buddy?

Any of you use a separate gps just to mark a few locations.
Something like the foretrex wrist gps or erred solar.
I had a chess etrex gecko for years and it got me home many times.Maybe not the best route but it worked.
 
For me it would all come down to weather conditions, distance from truck/camp, condition of partner, ability to use the InReach to contact first responders and the biggest determining determining factor IMO..What we have with use to keep us alive, in the event that we have to wait for help for a prolonged period.
 
Been thinking about one for years but im just waiting on the battery life to get better.
They do seem to be getting a lot better on some models.
Mine will do 24 days with normal use but it's like 1.5 days if I leave the GPS tracker on for a trail or something. That's why I just do a waypoint, don't wanna kill that battery prematurely. It'll charge super fast though if I bring the cable for it. It's an old Instinct Solar original version I got on super clearance.
 
So much to consider. My short answer is this in no particular order and I could make a flow chart for each one.

Can I signal or call for help from where we are?

Is it safe for the non injured to leave or is it too dark, rugged, stormy?

How far is getting help vs how long the injured can go without attention?

Are we lost and injured or just injured?

Am I capable of treating the condition?
 
Deciding to leave my buddy would depend on the situation. If there is not much hope we will be found by SARs and I can get out and get help to him then I go. If it is likely we will be found by SARs at our location then I would stay with him to assist him. My hunting buds are all lifelong friends not random dudes I am on a hunting trip on so leaving them laying out there would be a tough decision.
 
I was in a bad motorcycle accident in the backcountry and my friend had to go get help as I wasn't able to walk or move much, No other choice. Thank God for Life flight.

Most important thing I learned was to leave detailed travel plans and stick to them and also have an Inreach type device on you.
 
How did your buddy break his leg?
we met on a trail as dark approached to hunt back to camp. he was on a nearly flat level well used trail with only a degree or two of slope. a wrong step and snapped both bones near his ankle.
SAR was amazing. they have my support.

when i hit the trail head a young girl was talking on the phone and i used her phone to call. it took many calls to get the info to the dispatcher. every 10 seconds the line would go dead.

within 10 minutes SAR there [ and we were 30 miles from town] i dont know where he was located but it darn sure was not town!
 
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