It's a somewhat puzzling story because I can't quite understand what they were doing for three hours. I mean, on the south Lykken, you go up one end or the other, i.e. either the Murray Canyon end, or the Mesquite end, which normally takes about twenty five to thirty minutes (well, that's how long it takes me

) and then you traverse the rolling terrain between the two, which takes (me) about another forty minutes, and then you go down, or turn around and go back. The story said the SAR people hiked thirty five minutes to get to them, so I wonder where exactly on this hike they were. Surely they were somewhat past the picnic tables on top of the Murray side.
re: climbant's point--I understand his frustration/incredulity--you'd think after about thirty minutes they'd figure out they needed to turn around and go down--but OTOH, I remember when I first started hiking here about ten years ago, I repeatedly did the Desert Museum trail in July at 10 am. I was so dumb I didn't understand why I would have headaches and cramping the rest of the day. It took me a month or two to grasp that it wasn't a good idea and stop doing that, and actually almost a year before I started to recognize the bodily signs of approaching heat stress (and to stop when I felt them.) Being from Scotland, they'd probably never experienced heat like that and had no ability to recognize their bodily symptoms were signaling danger. Also it may have been one of those situations where one person was really set on completing the hike (probably the husband), the other wanted to return, and it became a point of contention.
Whatever happened, it's horribly sad.
Q: How many therapists does it take to screw in a light bulb? A: Only one, but the light bulb has to want to change ...