Strider wrote:Thread title is a bit insensitive mate. Someone here could know or even be related to this person.
I'm sorry he died and i'm saddened by it and for his loved ones and my condolences to them, but i'm also i'm sick to death of reading about people dying in the NZ wilderness for want of some common sense. let stories like this serve as a warning, educate yourself and upskill yourself, but dont just wander off on a whim with your sense of danger turned off.
these stories are from this week alone.. i see people who are their own worst enemies in the mountains all the time and so do a lot of other experienced NZ trampers, a lot of the time you can't tell them anything, i've had arguments with people who were going way out of their depth, and nothing would get them to change their minds, if you get a plan in your head , be prepared to alter it at any time if you smell danger or things arent going as expected... their focus is about adrenaline and adventure without any balance for understanding how to go about being safe in the outdoors...
he won't be the last to die like this.
not even the kayakers or SAR would go down that gorge. no one should have gone into that gorge, he cant have come across any information about the gorge before hand because no one has ever attempted it because its too risky. he went in on a whim because he saw something exciting to do, and there was only ever going to be one conclusion, death...
like the death on the milford track last year, the comments of the people who survived the river crossing was, "we couldnt turn back" well that was a lie. there was nothing stopping them turning back, they had one plan in their head, cross a flooded stream to get to the hut they wanted to get to and one of them drowned,
they could have waited to see if the river went down, they could easily have turned back but didnt think walking back the five hours to the hut was an option, plenty of options are better than persisting through a flooded stream thats beyond your experience and ability.
when i was brought up with bush craft we were given a lot of tough love and serious warnings about the mountains, they kill people regularly through inattention, inexperience and bad decision making... theres a doco put out called "a stupid way to die", at present there are people being rescued from nz mountains several times a week, and little of it gets into mainstream news. you can look at some of our mountains like Mt taranaki, and there have been 80 people die there and countless injuries and rescues there. countless rescues from the tongariro crossing. someone was rescued last year from there, she was so off course and hypothermic and under clothed it wasnt funny, and it was clear weather, didnt know how to navigate, blindly followed a group going a different route then lost them and lost herself. and on and on the stories go... doesnt take long to get out of your depth if you dont have the experience to extricate yourself from difficult situations. and alot of people on this forum do know how to extricate themselves but it comes through experience and skill and they can make it look easy. bear grylls made the most stupid programe in NZ it was an apalling display of how not to behave in the NZ mountains he made it out to be a fun adventure and as usual he somehow escaped serious injury from a series of stupid stunts
i was on the kepler , a no of people were so panicked by the weather they abandoned their packs to get to the hut faster. your pack is your life boat, thats like getting out of a life boat in the sea.. even our great walks can catch people out. if i see people tramping above the bushline with jeans I dont beat around the bush, i tell them, those jeans could kill them one day... and i'm not polite about it and I make no apology, sometimes tough love is in order, safety first.
I hve experience going off track in NZ but i dont assume that will translate automatically to me being able to go off track in other parts of the world, my first trip to tasmania I stayed on documented tracks that i had read about that were known published walking tracks, i read up on potential dangers, , we dont have much in the way of poisonous animals in NZ so i read up on potential risks in Tas and briefed my girlfriend, be aware you may come across a poisonous snake..
experience is still a relative thing
from the land of the long white clouds...