JD
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That's the kind of dude you hope gets a big bill when they need to be rescued.
Could be a recovery, not a rescue.
Went up to Mansfield again. Everything to the top was on wind hold. It was cold. The groomed chin clip thrusday night, and it was looking pretty nice. Flat cord with nice drifts down both sides. I abandon the chin mission and skiied it instead, it's so rare that it's flat with fresh snow on it, and I love that trail. I skinned up with one other guy. By the time I changed over to DH mode he was just getting to the top. We chatted, he mentioned he was heading for the chin. No pack, no extra gear, goggles totally fubared allready, no food, water, extra layers. the he said he really wasn't that familiar with the chin. I was thinking to myself this is a disaster waiting to happen. It was 12 below at the gondi house, probably 15-20 below at the summit with 20-40 MPH winds...this guy was heading up alone without really knowing where he was going. I drew him a quick map in the snow of how to get to profanity and taft and explained where to go from there. I asked him if someone knew where he was heading and he said yes. I mentioned a few times how cold it was, and he said that once you were moving it was warm, in fact he was sweating. I told him you have to be prepared for injury and ran thru everything I had in my pack, and told him I was heading for the chin but decided against it due to conditions and the fact that I was alone. Hopefully he reconsidered. Made me really nervous to think about someone alone and completely unprepared exploring the chin with the wind chill in the neg 30-40 range....I skiied chin clip and it was nice. snow depth was variable, but I stuck close to the edges and really enjoyed the "reserved" inbounds terrain in the bright sun with sparkling snow. I hope my new friend made some good descision and or had some good luck on his mission. The chin looked brutal today.
JD - That is a chilling account. It sounds like you did everything you could.
I might have been tempted to talk to patrol on my way down. Although what could they do really? Not sure how you are supposed to handle a borderline attempted suicide.
Short version....hiked up to the chin for the first time ever on an afternoon on mid october to play in the first snow. (just moved to VT from South Carolina) My dog refused to downclimb either cliff trail or the north ridge, then at 3, the flurries turned into a total white out, my dog went hypothermic, sat down and refused to move. Fortunately for us, there was a couple from Washington state up there who were prepared. Visabilty was about 5 feet on the chin. I carried my 120 pound rotti mix back accross the chin from my second attempt to get him down the north ridge, now in 8-10 inches of fresh snow (it's a steep and exposed line that skirts 50+ foot cliffs and is 50+ degrees) and slept in the vestibule of their 2 person tent. Fortunately for me i was in some heavy Orvis Woolies and had one of the old school blue and black NF goretex shells. I put the dog on my day pack, unzipped my shell and wraped him in it, against my chest. After an hour he stopped shivering and we spent the rest of the night chatting and laughing at the stupidity of the situation. Turns out these folks were very experienced, had summited McKinnley and several other serious peaks out west in winter, and here they were shut down on the summit of mansfield. At first light we made our way all the way down the ridge, and off the Mtn. OK, not so short version. My old dog at 15 years, lies at my feet as I type this. I thought he was a gonner.
Yikes---that's some wicked scary crap. You must have been one happy camper to bump into those peeps...thank god they were up there.
Never had to stay the night, but we had a bud bust up his leg pretty bad skiing hourglass--hellsbrook. We had a boarder (off duty patrol from smuggs) who used his board as a sled and got our pal out (he used the guys skis)...........that was an intense 5 hours.
JD - That is a chilling account. It sounds like you did everything you could.
I might have been tempted to talk to patrol on my way down. Although what could they do really? Not sure how you are supposed to handle a borderline attempted suicide.