Here you go:

...you don't see the gun sitting there and firing by itself
I learned this lesson the hard way last summer. And I too am an only on-trails, often solo backpacker who may be similar skillset as you.DAVELA wrote:Not a problem on unfamiliar trails this year,my hiking ends were the dirt ends.rlown wrote:And all of that is why a pre-trip meeting is necessary for a group, especially if they are unknowns.
The trail hiking and no compass skills is a problem, because this is a Spring 2017 thread, most of the trails are buried.
I don't want to sound sanctimonious either, but the REI course is only giving you the basics for how to begin to use the compass and navigate. You should "hope" you never need to use it in an emergency, but without using it, you don't/won't really know how to use it when it counts. You make your own skill sets only with real-world practice and making it second nature. Every opportunity you get...on the trail, off the trail, in the park...learn to figure out where you are and how to get to where you need to be by busting out that compass.I am great at trails. Great at maps, etc. But all that is to say, this past spring I took compass training w/ REI. I hope I never need to use it.
Agreed. I was not super impressed by the course. It barely scratched the surface and the instructor often fell back on the line of "check against your GPS for confirmation."mrphil wrote:I don't want to sound sanctimonious either, but the REI course is only giving you the basics for how to begin to use the compass and navigate. You should "hope" you never need to use it in an emergency, but without using it, you don't/won't really know how to use it when it counts. You make your own skill sets only with real-world practice and making it second nature. Every opportunity you get...on the trail, off the trail, in the park...learn to figure out where you are and how to get to where you need to be by busting out that compass.I am great at trails. Great at maps, etc. But all that is to say, this past spring I took compass training w/ REI. I hope I never need to use it.
Go to something similar to this: http://baoc.org/wiki/WelcomeI don't want to sound sanctimonious either, but the REI course is only giving you the basics for how to begin to use the compass and navigate.
Who are these people? How do they prepare? What skills will they need to master in order to stay out of trouble?The purpose of this thread, is for everyone with experience in these extreme conditions, is to chime in with a cautionary note, specify things to keep in mind and prepare for.
Their are many folks who are itching to get out (cabin fever) or may be coming from another state, with reserved dates, for June or July, and will find themselves in extremely dangerous conditions, from snow covered trail, passes with icy conditions, dangerous crossings over snow bridges, cornices at the top of passes, and possible the most dangerous, swollen, ragging creeks and rivers.
In 60 years of backpacking (yeah I'm that old) I have never needed to use a compass. Close once but then the fog cleared because I hung tight for a while at a point where I could drop into any of 3 drainages and only one was where I wanted to go. That said I'm pretty savvy with a compass. But the real skill needed in my opinion is the ability to read a topo map and the terrain. The High Sierra has pretty dramatic topography that for me means that a compass, though carried, is never used for navigation. GPS is just extra weight and I'm not smart enough to use a smart phone.mrphil wrote:Original post/purpose:
Who are these people? How do they prepare? What skills will they need to master in order to stay out of trouble?The purpose of this thread, is for everyone with experience in these extreme conditions, is to chime in with a cautionary note, specify things to keep in mind and prepare for.
Their are many folks who are itching to get out (cabin fever) or may be coming from another state, with reserved dates, for June or July, and will find themselves in extremely dangerous conditions, from snow covered trail, passes with icy conditions, dangerous crossings over snow bridges, cornices at the top of passes, and possible the most dangerous, swollen, ragging creeks and rivers.
I would think that any group of people would need to be able to identify the strengths and weaknesses of their fellow party members in advance, as well as at least have some fairly basic navigational skills. How much can you talk about conditions with backpackers thrown into the mix without considering the backpackers themselves? No people involved and none of it matters at all.
At least two people that are participating in this discussion thread have openly admitted to having no compass skills. I think most here understand that to be extremely problematic in the best of conditions, much less when attempting winter travel.
How about this for the Bay area peeps?oldranger wrote: I have never needed to use a compass. The real skill needed in my opinion is the ability to read a topo map and the terrain.
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