Peregrinator
Hooded On A Hill
- Joined
- May 27, 2004
- Posts
- 89,482
Is that Willi Unsoeld? Cool pics. I love the old-skool ice axes.
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I love the old-skool ice axes.
Sad, but just so damn stupid at the same time.http://www.sacbee.com/2011/01/30/3362727/death-by-gps-in-desert.html#storylink=scinlineshare
Five harrowing days after becoming stuck on a remote backcountry road in Death Valley National Park in August 2009, Alicia Sanchez lay down next to her Jeep Cherokee and prepared to die.
Then she heard a voice.
"I called as I approached, asking if she was okay," wrote Ranger Amber Nattrass in a park report. "She was waving frantically and screaming, 'My baby is dead, my baby is dead.' "
In the SUV, Nattrass found Sanchez's lifeless 6-year-old son Carlos on the front seat. "She told me they walked 10 miles but couldn't find any help (and) … had run out of water and had been drinking their own urine," Nattrass wrote.
"She turned down a wrong road," Nattrass said in a recent interview. "She said she was following her GPS unit."
Read more: http://www.sacbee.com/2011/01/30/3362727/death-by-gps-in-desert.html#ixzz1DUSxnMAe
Coolest one I ever saw was in the Harvard Mountaineering Club office. It was a gift to Brad Washburn from Ricardo Cassin.I have two. One needs just a bit of repair to put back into service.
Sad, but just so damn stupid at the same time.
Coolest one I ever saw was in the Harvard Mountaineering Club office. It was a gift to Brad Washburn from Ricardo Cassin.
That might be worth stealing......
but then, who could you show it to?
Here it is. If you zoom in, you can see his name on the pick.
But in the words of David Brashears, five time summiteer of Everest, "there had been nothing in my training to prepare me to pass through the open graveyard waiting above."
An area along the northeast route to the summit has earned the unassuming nickname of "Rainbow Valley", simply because of the multicolored down jackets of the numerous corpses littering the hillside.
Shit, goddamn. They'd have to pry me off the ground with a fuckin' crowbar.
anyone not familiar with mts who followed the Yukon Quest this year now understands that even a 2000 ft summit can quickly raise it's head
I have not been a good YQ groupie this year. It's one tough race. Most years, it's tougher than the Iditarod.
the first half was amazingly fast. Everyone talked about records being shattered. Then came winds and piles of snow on both American and Eagle summits, which was separated by extreme overflows (up to 6 ft deep). It literally shredded the field. Although there was no human life lost, there was sadly too much life lost. Some of the best mushers in the world were brought to their knees and they have openly stated they thought they were going to die. It speaks worlds about the rescue/support staff being able to get to them.
edit: it also speaks worlds about the mushers being required to carry the gps units with panic/help buttons...it saved many lives over the last 3 days