http://abcnews.go.com/International/missing-north-carolina-mother-daughter-hikers-found-safe/story?id=38781724I just saw this on the news.
4/30/2016 7:10:52 PM
did Xena and/or hobbits save them?
4/30/2016 7:43:43 PM
How do you get lost in a park? Did they not have a phone, maps, or a gps? --I guess I assume everyone would be smart enough to go prepared on a hike like that. Apparently that isn't the case. [Edited on April 30, 2016 at 7:52 PM. Reason : s]
4/30/2016 7:49:05 PM
my friend and i almost got lost off of the great wall of china in beijing... we took a hike that wasn't well marked on the recommendation of a friend.. neither of us had very good cell service. it was possibly the scariest 30 minutes i've had in a long time where i got separated from her.
4/30/2016 8:05:07 PM
Couldn't you just follow the wall back to where you started?
4/30/2016 8:07:22 PM
4/30/2016 8:10:02 PM
^^ we did a four mile hike to get onto to the wall... we knew it was up.. but it was not an easy trail to navigate
4/30/2016 8:13:58 PM
You don't need cell service to use the GPS on your phone. You can have it in airplane mode and as long as the GPS is on it'll pin point you to within a few meters on a map albeit you have to have it cached or downloaded. If you've opened Google Maps at any point on your trip it'll have at least a high level area cached so you can navigate back to a road. Even without a phone or GPS with the advent of smart phones and GPS it's sad people have lost the ability to read a map. I grew up on road trips learning how to read a map and I even took an orienteering class at State (which helped tremendously for hiking). Now you give a topo map to a 20 year old and they look at you funny.
4/30/2016 8:26:56 PM
ib4 I'd hit it (Rachel)
4/30/2016 10:56:06 PM
4/30/2016 10:57:43 PM
^^
5/1/2016 2:03:20 AM
You don't have to be a submoron to get lost in the woods. Sometimes there's just a string of bad luck.Frequently a hiker sets out planning to do a very short, simple jaunt -- not the sort of thing you'd feel you needed a map or GPS for -- and something happens and they get turned around. At the point where their mental estimate of their location starts to diverge from their actual location, they may be pretty close to home base."Deep Survival" by Laurence Gonzales goes into a lot of detail about this. The author himself is pretty sharp and well-trained, but even he managed to end up in the kind of scenario I just described.
5/1/2016 2:49:41 AM
^True. I once went hiking through a forest/open field in Ohio with some family to look at some property my uncle was using to hunt. I still have never figured out how we ended up back at the truck by walking behind the cabin after walking straight on a path at the beginning and ending up at the front door of the cabin. I have watched survivor man before and he said when attempting to walk in one direction in a forest you should stand next to a tree, look at the next tree, then find a tree straight ahead of that. Once you walk to the 3rd tree you need to look back and find the line you just walked, then match that with some more trees. And you shouldn't always step left, or right every time either. If you do all of that, you reduce the odds of walking in circles.
5/1/2016 10:58:23 AM
women...smh
5/1/2016 11:17:37 AM
5/1/2016 11:43:52 AM
^A phone will only last so long. If I was going to go hiking I would make sure I had a really good compass. Maybe these women did though, but still got lost.
5/1/2016 11:49:04 AM
Yeah compass + map most definitely.--Although I've taken a phone on a week trip before and had it in airplane mode and only used it for occasional photos and map checks and it lasted the entire time. I have a dedicated GPS now but it's nice to know you can have a phone either off or in airplane mode and you can rely on it for your location. For back country stuff I use one of these in tandem with my GPS: http://www.findmespot.com/en/They're $99 and require a $99 yearly subscription but work pretty much anywhere you have GPS reception and worth it if you know you're going to be in remote locations. [Edited on May 1, 2016 at 12:31 PM. Reason : s]
5/1/2016 12:22:24 PM
5/1/2016 5:21:21 PM
5/1/2016 5:37:34 PM
latterAnd everybody knows everything's more fun when you're not prepared.
5/1/2016 6:33:35 PM
Well since no one else is going to say it...I'd hit it.[Edited on May 1, 2016 at 7:35 PM. Reason : .]
5/1/2016 7:34:41 PM
5/1/2016 11:18:47 PM
you posted her fb link, just sayin
5/1/2016 11:20:02 PM
5/1/2016 11:24:34 PM
For sure, my point was tourists are less likely to be prepared than locals.[Edited on May 1, 2016 at 11:35 PM. Reason : ^^ true. mostly trying to figure out if they've talked about what happened]
5/1/2016 11:26:56 PM
Makes sense.
5/1/2016 11:28:53 PM
You also have to take into account other unexpected hardships, like slipping and hitting your head on a rock, which Rachel did.
5/2/2016 12:07:06 AM
5/2/2016 8:22:13 AM
WRAL has loved this story on FB. I, on the otherhand, don't give a fuck.
5/2/2016 1:33:15 PM
5/2/2016 4:28:21 PM
Trying to adapt to the wildernessWhere even foes close their eyes and leave
5/2/2016 5:09:49 PM
Some of my favorite excerpts:
5/2/2016 5:56:31 PM
Well to be fair, the school systems don't teach people that kind of shit anymore, because supposedly math is more important than art or knowing what the fuck is going on around you outside of what your iPhone can tell you about it.
5/3/2016 12:11:52 PM
NZ Women Survive Being Lost in NC Wilderness?
5/3/2016 4:45:25 PM
K women survive being lost in the k wilderness
5/3/2016 5:15:35 PM
"On the next episode of I Shouldn't Be Alive..."
5/3/2016 7:50:28 PM
5/4/2016 1:22:01 PM
[Edited on May 4, 2016 at 1:29 PM. Reason : .]
5/4/2016 1:29:39 PM