guest wrote:...it may help, or may discourage others from doing in winter / early spring, but at the same time give confidence to others to go for it.
ss
Yeah, talk about darned if you do, and darned if you don't.
The reason I don't think about doing Skyline in the winter is
not because I
don't know anything about hiking; it's because I
do know a bit about hiking. I know what ice is like, and I ain't going anywhere near it without further training.
OK, now for some ideas:
One fairly simple idea is to post signs along the route describing deaths and resuces conducted on Skyline that list a "moral of the story" at the bottom of the sign. For example: "Joe X slipped on ice and plummeted 1000 feet to his death. Joe had no ice equipment or training.
Don't go on this mountain with out proper training and ice specific gear."
I'm good for the cost of one sign.
I wonder if the county would actually
save money if they posted someone on a strategic spot that would "evaluate" people. Possibly impractical, but maybe voluteer San Jacinto rangers or ?.
Then there are permits. Veteran Skylies could get a pass that exempts them from permits, but everyone else would have to get a permit
that would include warnings about what has happened on the route and what common dangers are. This would require some patrolling, but not as much perhaps as posting an "evaluator."
There! Now, I'm no doubt the most unpopular person on this board for suggesting permits, but at the risk of being banned for life, there are my thoughts. Perhaps better a permit system than outright closure?