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| #150995 - 10/05/08 11:16 PM  Hiker dies in Sierra, probably from exposure |  
|   Old Hand
 
 Registered:  03/19/05
 Posts: 1185
 Loc:  Channeled Scablands
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http://www.rgj.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20081005/NEWS18/81005001&OAS_sitepage=news.rgj.com%2Fbreakingnews
 Will post more when I here from our SAR group.
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| #151047 - 10/06/08 02:47 PM  Re: Hiker dies in Sierra, probably from exposure
[Re: Nicodemus] |  
|   Enthusiast
 
   Registered:  01/06/08
 Posts: 319
 Loc:  Canada
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Wet, Cold, Elevation, limited Calories, and apparently no fire. In those conditions people will get hypothermia and some will die. Its very unfortunate, but it happens in the wilderness. The good news is the others survived. 
_________________________ 
Bruce Zawalsky Chief Instructor Boreal Wilderness Instituteboreal.net |  
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| #151073 - 10/06/08 07:10 PM  Re: Hiker dies in Sierra, probably from exposure
[Re: Nicodemus] |  
|   Veteran
 
 Registered:  03/31/06
 Posts: 1355
 Loc:  United Kingdom.
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Under those conditions getting a fire going might well be somewhere between extremely difficult and impossible. 
 Also: note the age group. Only one of them was under 50.  OAP's playing spring chicken.
 
 Like it or not: the older you are, the less you are able to withstand. And yes, ladies and gentlemen, there are exceptions to that.
 
 A simple shelter tarp like a lightweight poncho and a few feet of line, for an improvised shelter, would probably have saved them.
 
 Waterproofs, extra clothing and chemical heater packs like the commonly sold handwarmers are lifesavers.
 
 
_________________________I don't do dumb & helpless.
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| #151077 - 10/06/08 08:10 PM  Re: Hiker dies in Sierra, probably from exposure
[Re: Leigh_Ratcliffe] |  
|   Enthusiast
 
   Registered:  01/06/08
 Posts: 319
 Loc:  Canada
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The shame is what one brings into a Wilderness Survival situation is rarely reported on. I notice than when a surviver is properly interviewed or is reporting it themselves they can tell you every piece of gear they had, found, lost, or received along the way. It would make a big difference to wilderness survival education if more successful survival situations were reported along with the gear they had taken into the woods.  
_________________________ 
Bruce Zawalsky Chief Instructor Boreal Wilderness Instituteboreal.net |  
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| #151082 - 10/06/08 08:48 PM  Re: Hiker dies in Sierra, probably from exposure
[Re: Grouch] |  
|   Geezer
 
 Registered:  01/21/04
 Posts: 5163
 Loc:  W. WA
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In Britain, OAP means 'Old Age Pensioner'.
 And it certainly would be great if reporters DID report what they had with them. It might make a few people think for a couple of seconds and grab something that they would ordinarily leave behind.  But that doesn't make news, does it?
 
 Something to keep you out of the cold wind could make the difference between life and death.
 
 "Death knows no time, nor respects rank... Death walks in darkness and carries away young and old, high and low, good and evil wayfarers that it meets on the way." (Ahura Mazda)
 
 He doesn't mention the careless and stupid, but I guess poets don't.
 
 Sue
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| #151083 - 10/06/08 08:50 PM  Re: Hiker dies in Sierra, probably from exposure
[Re: Susan] |  
|   Enthusiast
 
 Registered:  07/02/08
 Posts: 395
 Loc:  Ohio
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| #151103 - 10/07/08 12:00 AM  Re: Hiker dies in Sierra, probably from exposure
[Re: Todd W] |  
|   Sheriff
 Pooh-Bah
 
   Registered:  10/12/07
 Posts: 1804
 Loc:  Southern California
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... it's AMAZING how many people go with their family not prepared... amazed more don't die frankly. Truly. I went out for a backpack this past Sat/Sun.  At the trailhead, there was a day hiker there with shorts (cotton) and a sweatshirt (cotton) on.  She had no backpack.  She only had a very small fanny pack with a water bottle on one side and a stuff sack (looked like it might have held a windbreaker) on the other.  The forecast was for 40% chance of snow .  It didn't snow that day, but I awoke to frost on the ground the next morning.  That's a bit chilly for shorts and no supplies.   I see this all the time when I'm out, so I shouldn't react to it anymore, but it's just so astounding to me.  Have they never heard that unprepared people die  in the wilderness?  I just can't fathom it. |  
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