Locking Cars

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maverick
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Locking Cars

Post by maverick »

How many of you have ever left you car at the trailhead, and then later on
started to worry about whether you really locked the car, or not?
Who has gone in several miles, and then gone back to check?
Any of you continue on with your trip, and then when you got back to the car you
found out that you really did forget to lock it?
I have gone through this a couple times, but luckily each time I got back to
my car at the end of my trip, it was locked.
Or has anyone ever lost there keys while backpacking?
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Re: Locking Cars

Post by balzaccom »

Every trip, I get 500 yards up the trail and then forget. It turns out that I always have locked the car...but our trips wouldn't be the same without me slipping off my pack and leaving my wife on the trail as I sprint back to make sure.

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Re: Locking Cars

Post by oldranger »

That happens to me fairly frequently but not lately. How about getting 2 miles in and then realizing I left the keys inside the locked car? Had two of my kids with me and this was before I had a cell phone. Well after hiking out I found a person with a cell phone and called a neighbor. Told her how to get into the house, where the extra key was and how to identify it. Before long she was at the trailhead (luckily only 40 minutes from home) and proudly presented me with ... the wrong key. She must have been colorblind (but I thought that only males were). I had her bring us home. I got the key and then enlisted another friend to return me to the TH.

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rlown
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Re: Locking Cars

Post by rlown »

Never happened. i kinda have a mental checklist. Make the last call for anything anyone wants out of the truck, clean it up, lock the door, check it, and put the key on the little key ring inside one of the pockets in my pack. i know.. kinda anal about that, but i never have to turn around.
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maverick
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Re: Locking Cars

Post by maverick »

Wow Or, that was very nice of her to drive 40 min's, nice neighbor!
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Re: Locking Cars

Post by quentinc »

I've become so absent-minded that I usually worry about whether I've left my brain behind in the car. Curiously, though, I've never had the slightest worry about having not locked the doors.

Oh, but the number of things I have left behind....there is that agonizing point where one has to decide just how far it is worth walking back, or just going without sunglasses (my favorite things to forget) or whatever else I realize I've left.
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AlmostThere
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Re: Locking Cars

Post by AlmostThere »

I've got back to the car and found a door unlocked. Luckily nothing left inside the car and nothing disturbed.

Due to lockouts when the wind blows a door shut and I end up calling AAA (fortunately not at trailheads) I have a habit of keeping my keys on a carabiner and firmly in hand or clipped on my person somewhere until everything is settled, all doors tested, and then the key is clipped to a pack D ring where they jingle from a pack strap all the time (day hikes) or zipped in the security pocket of my pants where they stay for the duration of the backpack. I check the condition of the pocket before each trip starts so there are no holes for the key to fall through.

I get especially paranoid if I have people riding with me...

I have thrown away my keys with trash at coffee houses, dropped my keys in shelving at cash registers, and had to climb into my car via the trunk before... so I get really nuts about this sort of thing. Some trailheads are so far out of phone range, locking myself out would be a long second backpack ... a couple of trips there wouldn't have been good hitchhiking for another 10-15 miles of dirt road. Doesn't really appeal to have what scraps of food remain between you for another day's walk. #-o

I've thought about hide-a-key but not sure where on the car I would stash that so it would not be easy for someone to find. I don't have many not - obvious places on my car that I could reach myself.
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Re: Locking Cars

Post by Snow Nymph »

I turn back all the time. Mine has a long range, so if I can see the lights, I can click on it from a distance. A few times it was not locked.
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Re: Locking Cars

Post by LMBSGV »

I (or we when I'm not going solo) have a trailhead ritual to prevent worrying about locking the car. After the pack(s) are out of the car and everything else stowed out of sight, we lock the car. Then I circle the car and go to every door and make sure it's locked. That rids us of any possible doubts. Of course, this also leads to anyone else in the parking lot to wonder what we're doing. (There's something about getting packs out, changing shoes to hiking boots, etc. that gets a lot of day hikers and fisher people watching you.) That only helps me remember locking the car.
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freestone
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Re: Locking Cars

Post by freestone »

I have never worried about my car at a Sierra trailhead. My experience is, if they see it and want it, they will get it. The damage will be greater than the value of the booty. I lock my car, but I don't angst over it, nor do I leave valuables or food in plain site. I drive a Ford Focus or rental, who cares cares?
Short cuts make long delays. JRR Tolkien
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