TentPeg wrote:Yeah-nah.
Plenty of "suitable" construction in the TWWHA already.
Installed chains won't stop the need to make good decisions but it will change the point at which those decisions are made.
TentPeg wrote:This is a walkers climb and it should be safe for walkers. Those who want to climb have many options. The rest of us don't.
TentPeg wrote:Thanks NNW.
Always good to get a rant.
doogs wrote:I've climbed hundreds of peaks/routes in Scotland and dozens in the European Alps/Pyrenees. None had Via Ferratta. It is a huge exaggeration to think that they are everywhere, most places you either scramble up or Trad Climb.
north-north-west wrote:Why can't people just accept that there are places they aren't physically or mentally capable of visiting?
owen wrote:north-north-west wrote:Why can't people just accept that there are places they aren't physically or mentally capable of visiting?
Are you suggesting that all of those who have died on Fed Peak were incapable, rather than suffering unfortunate accidents?
owen wrote:doogs wrote:I've climbed hundreds of peaks/routes in Scotland and dozens in the European Alps/Pyrenees. None had Via Ferratta. It is a huge exaggeration to think that they are everywhere, most places you either scramble up or Trad Climb.
Who said they are everywhere?owen wrote:
I think that the Europeans have gone a long way towards badluckproofing the bush. Any route over there as dangerous as the Federation Peak direct ascent will probably have a via ferrata on it. This essentially takes bad luck out of the equation, as anybody is welcome to use them, for free (or not use them if they want).
TentPeg wrote: I have been to Feder three times when the decision was not to summit because of the conditions. We could have done so with chains in place.
This is a walkers climb and it should be safe for walkers. Those who want to climb have many options. The rest of us don't.
owen wrote:I understand and share the desire to keep Tasmania wild, but are a few chains and rungs really going to destroy that, for the sake of not having a reasonably high chance of not coming home?
doogs wrote:It was you who said it.
DaveTas wrote:Owen, your way of thinking about the topic is abysmal. You want to dumb down the experience to a level you deem “safe” and deprive future generations the adventurous experience that so many of us hold dear to our hearts.
Tortoise wrote:It's not possible, nor fair, to ascribe any capability or lack thereof to any individuals who tragically lost their lives.
Tortoise wrote:I don't know if anyone actually has the stats, but with the many people who now summit each year, there is a very, very small chance of not coming home.
owen wrote:I didn't say they are everywhere. What is untrue about what I said? If death-to-visitor ratio is a measure of danger, the example of Cuillin Ridge that you mentioned doesn't refute my claim.
Tazz81 wrote:....they still wouldn’t do anything about it apart from a warning sign.
ILUVSWTAS wrote:Interesting discussion.
Speaking from someone who had a family member involved with a fatality on the descent of Fedder I can tell you no one from my family, or the family of the deceased ever would want to see this majestic mountain tied down with steel and chains.
This type of narrow minded thinking is the same as wanting to see a shark hunted down and killed because it ate a diver who entered its terrain.
We know the risks involved when we venture into the domain of greater powers.
Let the wild be wild.
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 16 guests