LOST: Rack @ Echo Cliffs, Nov. 27th - Found
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Update: |
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Thanks JJ! Much appreciated for the reply. |
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1. How did leaving your "rack" help you survive? |
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This thread is way better than the same thread he started over on RC. And here I thought that RC had the monopoly on snarkiness. |
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Richard Shore wrote:Why are you bringing Trango alpine Equalizers to Echo Cliffs?well, the gear description also mentions 10 assorted biners with some runners, so I don't think they really had the ideal Echo Cliffs rack. I was somewhat skeptical of this story, but evidently it's real ... edhat.com/site/tidbit.cfm?n… |
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Jon H wrote:And here I thought that RC had the monopoly on snarkiness..Anything to do with sport climbing or bouldering gets cut up over here. |
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And to think the Animal Actors of Hollywood is only a few miles away. |
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All I can tell you is that my each of us had been to Echo Cliffs once before. One friend (3 of us stranded) had previously escorted out a couple of friends (not stranded) 3 hours earlier and was familiar with the trails. But as soon as it hit 4pm it got dark and started raining. We didn't have any waterproof jackets or boots. With weak 10-30 lumen flashlights (1 headlamp), we hiked back the way we thought we came. At a certain point on the trail we hit a dead end. After searching for 30 mins for the main trail, we hesitantly decided to take the riverbed, which should have led us to the picnic tables thus the main trail. A friend was carrying the rack on his shoulder (not in a backpack) that required steadying with one hand, on the other hand, there was a flashlight. The riverbed rocks were slippery and we could not rely on our feet at all. Visibility dropped dramatically as my glasses fogged up from the 40 degree F and showering rain. Every step we took we created the new path. We had to break branches, stomp vegatation, walk through streams, and such. After all this struggling, my friend wanted me to throw away my 50-pound pack, but I refused. He instead tossed the rack so he could stay balanced, free a hand, and prevent any more ensnaring from the wild branches/thorns. That was a good idea at the time. Finally, after 3 hours of hiking in this freezing, hopeless condition (talking about going 1/5th the normal speed), we decided to take shelter in a tiny cave. Luckily someone else had already stayed here before as we could tell from a wooden plank covering the top of the cave held by a wooden pole. We could not build a fire with any dry leaves, branches, or kindling we found nearby. Even after shaving twigs for an hour, the lighter could only burn some topo printouts and subway wrapping, but the tinder would just cherry out. Luckily, I pulled out a dry northface down jacket, which I gave to a friend. I had a nylon thermal long sleeve and pants, which I threw on. My second friend had it the worst as he was only wearing a thin wind breaker, 2 tee's, and pants. Still drenched and with a fire, we huddled closely throughout the night. The time went by slowly without a chance of sleep. At 2:30am, my friend heard a chopper in the distance and started yelling for us to get out there and signal with our flashlights. I was so delirious that I tried to ignore his words in an attempt to doze off and maintain the little warmth I had left. Of course, we eventually got up and strobed our lights, and they quickly located our base. After the helicopter made it's third round, the ranger dropped down and guided us to the highest ground around. After a 10min hike,b the chopper was hovering along the edge of the hill where we had to climb in one by one. We got a 30 second ride to the parking lot where my brother, friend, and sheriffs were waiting to greet us. The End. |
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Awesome. |
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Ok... so maybe you weren't thinking clearly because you were lost and scared... but, if you had a harness, some 'biners, and a bunch of stuff you typically attach to a harness and you wanted your hands to be free, why wouldn't you just put on the harness and clip everything to it? |
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Okay, wait. I'm still really curious as to how the copter got involved. Did your friends try to find you at all? I'm assuming it wasn't you who called SAR. And what did the sherriff say once your 30 second heli ride was over?? |
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transattic wrote: my friend wanted me to throw away my 50-pound pack, but I refused.I reread this and I am curious... why did you have a 50 lb pack?? 1 rope (<10 lbs, my 70m weighs 9.8 lb) 18 quick draws ~4 lbs A few locking biners, belay device, etc. another pound That is only 15 lbs... Add in head lamp, jacket, some water, etc., and you still don't get to 20 lbs. Even with a second full size rope, you are still under 30 lbs. I've gone alpine climbing with ~50 lb pack, including a tent and other gear. It is hard to believe that you had a 50 lb pack and not enough gear to survive a night without needing a helicopter rescue... |
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Sleep in the Kamaziai cave you pussy. |
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Julius Beres wrote: I reread this and I am curious... why did you have a 50 lb pack?? 1 rope (<10 lbs, my 70m weighs 9.8 lb) 18 quick draws ~4 lbs A few locking biners, belay device, etc. another pound That is only 15 lbs... Add in head lamp, jacket, some water, etc., and you still don't get to 20 lbs. Even with a second full size rope, you are still under 30 lbs. I've gone alpine climbing with ~50 lb pack, including a tent and other gear. It is hard to believe that you had a 50 lb pack and not enough gear to survive a night without needing a helicopter rescue...Well, add a Rotory hammer drill and 20 lbs of bolts and hangers in there and see what you come up with. |
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I along with 2 friends were climbing in Echo Cliffs. Due to loss of daylight/visibility mixed in with the heavy rain we were unable to hike back to the lot (Sandstone Peak) getting horribly lostic Text
where were you at Echo or Mount Olympus? |
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The suffering you endured that night is beginning to pale under the thunderous ridicule you are getting. (Supertopo thread has over 50 posts in first 4 hrs.) |
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One time when I was on Everest w/o O2 (of course), and going super, hella-light (ala Estaban Casa) I remembered that I forgot my one piece down suit, I just didn't pack it... so, long story short, I had to bivy in the Sandy Pittman cave for the night. Luckily for me I did have my TNF heated fleece jacket so I was super toasty and didn't have to use my sat phone to call the guy [chopper] who rescued that other guy earlier in the week. So, when I got back to ABC I quickly grabbed my one piece down suit and hastily repacked and onsighted the Beeotch "in a day". Oh yeah, even at that altitude my Adidas sport goggles never fogged up - maybe you should invest in some, they're well worth the $300. I can't remember why I'm telling you all this, oh well. |
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EDGE wrote: Danny Boyle is all over this. The working title for the movie is "8 3/4 hours."That is pretty damn funny. I'm glad you survived your little adventure and hope you get your rack back, but man do I not want to go climbing with you. |
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what a thread! |
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transattic wrote:Still drenched and with a fire, we huddled closely throughout the night.Round these here parts we call this moment a "Burly Triplet." I'm sure the experience brought y'all closer together (pun intended.) |
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Jay D. wrote:Awesome. Heli-rescue while sports climbing. I wish more people would exit the gyms and start climbing outside. We need more stories like this one.http://mountainproject.com/v/injuries_and_accidents/bee_attack_8102010/106869684 |