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Staying 'found' requires some basic skills
Staying 'found' requires some basic skills
8/17/2010
Sisters Nugget
By Jeff Spry
A rash of rescues of lost hikers points out something many folks who venture
into the Sisters Country tend to forget. Our backcountry playground is a
wilderness and should be taken seriously and treated with
respect.
A casual outing can turn into a crisis very quickly. Hikers get lost; they get
hurt. And then search and rescue teams must turn out, risking their own lives
and limbs to save them.
For Central Oregon mountaineering aficionado Robert Speik, staying found in the
wilderness is as easy as counting to four. The 82-year-old expert mountaineer,
clinician and writer is on a lifelong crusade to
educate the public and keep them safe. His Four Basic Responsibilities of
backcountry travel are well worth committing to memory for those venturing out
into the woods in any season. Speik's mission is to illuminate
hidden dangers and risks and mitigate them through education.
1. Tell a reliable person where you're going, what you're going to do and when
you will return. Search and rescue personnel will need to know where you parked
your vehicle, its description and license number, your
cell number, provider and experience level of your companions.
The person must be responsible to call sheriff's search and rescue through 911
if you don't check in by an agreed-upon time.
2. Each backcountry traveler or climber must be prepared with a lightweight
daypack and enough extra clothing, water, food and selected gear to survive an
emergency stop of several hours or overnight.
These essentials are seasonal and should focus on keeping you warm and dry,
hydrated, eating simple carbohydrates and the ability to stay in one place. If
you become lost, don't try to find your way until you
become exhausted, cold or dangerously wet. Wait at your marked location safely
for rescuers.
3. Have a topo map of the area, a baseplate compass and inexpensive GPS that
provides your coordinates. A simple Garmin GPS receiver costs only about $100, a
base plate compass $35 and a 1:24,000 USGS
Quad topo map, $7; total $137.
4. Carry your basic digital cell phone and periodically learn where you can
contact cell towers.
The common misconception is to assume that because your cell phone does not have
GPS, it's of no use. Since 2004, all cell phones sold are required to contain an
E-911 indicator which triangulates your position
through a network of cell towers.
Better still, Speik believes, is to purchase a SPOT device for $149 which is a
true satellite GPS messenger tool operating on the Department of Defense's
Global Positioning System to notify friends and/or 911. There
are few areas in the Oregon Cascades where a cell phone is out of contact.
Almost the entire Sisters Wilderness area is covered by Verizon towers. Call
rescuers with your cell and give them your exact coordinates
from your map and GPS, current condition and your plans.
For further information visit Speik's Web site at
http://www.TraditionalMountaineering.org.
Another perspective comes from Gabe Chladek, a former climbing ranger,
backcountry ski guide and current director of Three Sisters Backcountry Inc.
Chladek advocates less reliance on electronic gadgets in the
outdoors and instead, wants people to assemble a complete toolbox of skills.
"Having devices like a SPOT unit or a GPS doesn't instantly make you an expert
mountaineer," warns Chladek. "They're just tools that help, and take practice to
properly use and master. You rely on your own
wilderness skills to keep yourself out of trouble. A call to search and rescue
should only be a final option in extreme circumstances. Don't be irresponsible
and abuse the system. You need to have map-and-compass
skills, first aid training and know how to anticipate and interpret weather."
It takes time to build knowledge through guidebooks, basic courses, and field
experience accumulated over time. Chladek suggests making decisions
conservatively, and based on the skills you have.
"There's never any reason to push it in the wilds," he says. "You can always
back off and come back another day."
Reader Comments
Posted: Friday, August 20, 2010
Article comment by: Robert Speik
Thanks Jeff Spry and the NuggetNews for an accurate and readable story on the
Basic Responsibilities of all backcountry travelers, whether summer hikers,
snowshoers, skiers, snowmobilers, climbers, hunters,
wanderers and more.
Read More on my Web about the extra clothing and simple light weight items that
each person should carry in a simple day pack, sized to the individual, the
season, the forecast weather and the length and difficulty
of the proposed adventure. These items are listed under the Ten Essential
Systems used by outdoor clubs such as the (Oregon) Mazamas and the (Washington)
Mountaineers.
Also, folks should re-read Jeff's excellent story on our Deschutes County
volunteer Search and Rescue Unit, printed in the NuggetNews a few days ago.
--Robert Speik
http://www.nuggetnews.com/main.asp?SectionID=5&SubSectionID=5&ArticleID=17589&TM=38167.88
WARNING - *DISCLAIMER!*
Mountain climbing has inherent dangers that can, only in part, be mitigated
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