[pct-l] Sierra Solo
Diane at Santa Barbara Hikes dot com
diane at santabarbarahikes.com
Sat Apr 21 16:51:14 CDT 2012
Oh, and I forgot to say, one reason not to make high-tech things your
main safety net are because if you really are in real trouble, you:
- may not be able to read the buttons or screen
- may not have the finger coordination to press buttons
- may be mentally compromised in a way that navigating a user-
interface is too difficult
- may find that other types of knowledge can provide better safety in
the short term
For example, you could have hypothermia and not be able to use your
fingers. Your thinking could be compromised at the same time. If you
at least have the mental capacity to set up a shelter and get warm,
you might then be able to use your fingers to push the buttons and
use your brain to realize pushing those buttons maybe isn't needed
after all.
Or another example, you broke your leg and your reading glasses fell
off a cliff. You can't see anything small. You can still blow a
whistle that another hiker can hear.
Maybe I'm way off here, but still, having something simple you can
use to call for help when other parts of you aren't working so well
is a good thing.
On Apr 21, 2012, at 2:22 PM, Diane Soini of Santa Barbara Hikes wrote:
> Also, I would strongly suggest you not look to high technology to
> be your main safety net. A whistle and signal mirror are good
> things to have on hand, won't break or lose power. Fine if you want
> to bring a high-tech thing as well, but often it is the simple
> things make the real difference.
>
> On Apr 18, 2012, at 10:00 AM, pct-l-request at backcountry.net wrote:
>> I have the amazing opportunity to tackle the Sierra section (from
>> Tehachapi
>> to Chester) over the summer, however it looks like I will be
>> soloing it.
>> This brings some interesting challenges to the table.
>
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