by cynthia23 » Thu Jan 03, 2008 12:00 pm
I so agree with you guys. Disaster can happen in a second when you are alone. People underestimate how likely one is to take a fall. Just walking is a complex endeavor at the best of times and when you add in fatigue, loose rocks, and bad weather, the chances of falling increase even more. I took a bad spill coming down Skyline (about 4000 feet) one day --I was tired, and I slipped on some dry weeds (now I know better than to walk on them). Even with poles, I came down hard and my arm bounced off a rock spire. I still don't know why my arm didn't break, the impact was definitely hard enough to crack it. (instead i got a giant lump.) But it could just as easily have been my head. The impact surely would have been enough to knock me out. If you are unconscious you can't even call for help, assuming your cell works. This episode with the dead man underscores the Aron Ralston Rule (so named after the guy who had to cut his own arm off to free himself when he became trapped under a rock while canyoneering)--if you go hiking alone, you must, must, must tell someone where you are going and your return time. (Aron Ralston told no one where he was hiking. It was only be pure luck his family figured it out.) If you telll no one where you're going or even that you are going on a hike, no one will come looking for you, even when there are flashing lights (as there was with this guy, apparently) If the authorities don't know with certainty someone is missing, they are unlikely to go looking for you ....
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 ...