by zippetydude » Sun May 04, 2014 9:11 pm
Yipes! That's a lot of rescues.
There are some good points in the above posts, and I agree with pretty much everything that's been said. I'm wondering if the sudden spike in temps didn't catch people who were already kinda far along in planning off guard, thus precipitating the sudden increase in rescues. I'm not condoning this way of thinking, but it seems likely. For example, how many people on Everest and K2 fail to turn around when they should simply because they have months of preparation and thousands of dollars at stake?
In a much lesser scale here, if a person has already got a hotel room booked, thought the weather would be safe the first week of May, and had already gotten the day off and the supplies packed and ready, they might not cancel their plans "just because the temperature went up a bit". I don't know that this came into play in any of the specific cases, but it is a definite risk factor and those of us who are regulars (and do Skyline anyway, shhhhh!) might want to keep a close eye out and maybe even ask what time people started when we pass them.
I passed a young couple 2 weeks ago towards the end of the traverse. I accidentally got a late start (about noon) and it was almost 90 so I was real cautious about drinking enough, but I was probably a little dehydrated myself. It was about 3:30 when I met them just before Coffman's Crag, and the guy was taking just a few steps at a time, then needing to sit and rest again and again. They had started at 6:00 that morning! He was probably severely dehydrated and didn't know it. I didn't leave them until they told me they had friends at the top waiting for them, so I figured there was someone there to sound the alarm if they didn't pop out at the top.
In any case, the start time was what alarmed me. Over 9 hours on the trail on a hot day is a long time. Had they not had friends waiting, I would have accompanied them. Probably the slowest ascent from Coffman's ever, but I would have been quite willing.
There will be more who get confused, dehydrated, or overestimate their ability before the long hot season is over. Hopefully they will all make it out alive and a bit wiser.
BTW: Steve, doesn't the chopper assist in your replenishing the supplies?
z