glad you and the boys made it out ok...our sport sure doesnt need any more exposure this season..
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This was a real "LEARNING" experience for me and the boys !!
#1 on my list for the summer...
Get Tunnel Bags installed on all the sleds with more survival gear.
Get more education and training!!
get and store this on your sled...
Called a Bivy sack
I have one for each sled, they are MUCH stronger than normal space blankets...they are a little more, and a little bulky, but fit perfectly in the nose cone of the Nytro...
Thanks for sharing this so that others may learn. I'm sure it would have been easier to just keep quiet (like most do), but instead you are helping others with this. That is admirable. Again, thank you for sharing this!
get and store this on your sled...
Called a Bivy sack
I have one for each sled, they are MUCH stronger than normal space blankets...they are a little more, and a little bulky, but fit perfectly in the nose cone of the Nytro...
Glad you guys made it out ok and hope you learned more than a few lessons.
I am not surprised the S&R guys didn't want a free meal. If I was dragged away from my family on Easter for someone with no more than stuck sleds the last thing I would want to do is waste more time with those people and away from my family.
I know I am going to get beat up a bit for my mistakes, but I want to learn from this and be a better rider as a result, and maybe someone else can learn from my mistakes as well.
good on ya for owing up and doing your best to prevent this from ever happening again.
When someone lifts my pack they usually go WTF do you have in this thing......my answer is simple....MY LIFE.
OK.
I am ready to be schooled.
Put yourself in my position.
Go back up to the sequence of events.
You are there with the boys, and it's now 3:15PM.
From that moment forward, what would YOU have done differently ??
Not trying to be mean or take pot shots at you.
But your first mistake was leaving the trailhead with riders that would not be able to help you out. I often get grief for being picky about who I will ride with, even being accused of being kinda snobby,. But the truth is if I can't count on you to save my life in a time of need then your just dead weight to me. I hold myself to that same standard.
OK, Here is what we had in each of our packs on Saturday.
Avalanche Probe
Avalanche saw
Backpacks
Beanies
Camera
CASH
de-fogging / de-icing wipe for goggles
Extra-Keys
Garmin Hcx530
Gloves, Lightweight Spare
Goggles, Spare
Map
Personal Locator Beacon
Shovel
batteries, lithium spare
Camelback Pack, INSULATED
Candle
Chapstick
Compass
Firestarter
Flashlight, head mounted.
Folding Saw
Hard Candy
Heat Packs, Large
Heat Packs, Small
Lighter
Mirror
Mylar Blanket, heavy duty
Mylar sleeping bag, Bivy Sack
Orange Surveyor's Tape Roll
Para Cord
Pot, to melt snow
Sierra Cup
Storm Proof Matches
Stove, esbit w/tabs
Strobe Light
Tarp
Toilet Paper
Whistle
That was all that will fit in our back packs.
This summer the sleds get tunnel bags on them, and the following items are to be added.
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<TABLE style="WIDTH: 275pt; BORDER-COLLAPSE: collapse" border=0 cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width=367><COLGROUP><COL style="WIDTH: 275pt" width=367><TBODY><TR style="HEIGHT: 15pt" height=20><TD style="WIDTH: 275pt; HEIGHT: 15pt" height=20 width=367>Closed Cell Foam Pad, cut down to sit on.</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE><TABLE style="WIDTH: 275pt; BORDER-COLLAPSE: collapse" border=0 cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width=367><COLGROUP><COL style="WIDTH: 275pt" width=367><TBODY><TR style="HEIGHT: 15pt" height=20><TD style="WIDTH: 275pt; HEIGHT: 15pt" height=20 width=367>Duct Tape, Gorilla</TD></TR><TR style="HEIGHT: 15pt" height=20><TD style="HEIGHT: 15pt" height=20>Energy Bars</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE><TABLE style="WIDTH: 275pt; BORDER-COLLAPSE: collapse" border=0 cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width=367><COLGROUP><COL style="WIDTH: 275pt" width=367><TBODY><TR style="HEIGHT: 15pt" height=20><TD style="WIDTH: 275pt; HEIGHT: 15pt" class=xl65 height=20 width=367>First Aid Kit</TD></TR><TR style="HEIGHT: 15pt" height=20><TD style="HEIGHT: 15pt" height=20>Flare, Arial</TD></TR><TR style="HEIGHT: 15pt" height=20><TD style="HEIGHT: 15pt" height=20>Flare, Handheld/road</TD></TR><TR style="HEIGHT: 15pt" height=20><TD style="HEIGHT: 15pt" height=20>Flare, Smoke</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE><TABLE style="WIDTH: 275pt; BORDER-COLLAPSE: collapse" border=0 cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width=367><COLGROUP><COL style="WIDTH: 275pt" width=367><TBODY><TR style="HEIGHT: 15pt" height=20><TD style="WIDTH: 275pt; HEIGHT: 15pt" height=20 width=367>Hose, Syphon</TD></TR><TR style="HEIGHT: 15pt" height=20><TD style="HEIGHT: 15pt" height=20>Large Trash Bags, 2+</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE><TABLE style="WIDTH: 275pt; BORDER-COLLAPSE: collapse" border=0 cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width=367><COLGROUP><COL style="WIDTH: 275pt" width=367><TBODY><TR style="HEIGHT: 15pt" height=20><TD style="WIDTH: 275pt; HEIGHT: 15pt" height=20 width=367>Long Underwear, Spare set</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE><TABLE style="WIDTH: 275pt; BORDER-COLLAPSE: collapse" border=0 cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width=367><COLGROUP><COL style="WIDTH: 275pt" width=367><TBODY><TR style="HEIGHT: 15pt" height=20><TD style="WIDTH: 275pt; HEIGHT: 15pt" height=20 width=367>MRE, w/heater
<TABLE style="WIDTH: 275pt; BORDER-COLLAPSE: collapse" border=0 cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width=367><COLGROUP><COL style="WIDTH: 275pt" width=367><TBODY><TR style="HEIGHT: 15pt" height=20><TD style="WIDTH: 275pt; HEIGHT: 15pt" height=20 width=367>Powder Packets, Hot Chocolate, Gatoraid…</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE><TABLE style="WIDTH: 275pt; BORDER-COLLAPSE: collapse" border=0 cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width=367><COLGROUP><COL style="WIDTH: 275pt" width=367><TBODY><TR style="HEIGHT: 15pt" height=20><TD style="WIDTH: 275pt; HEIGHT: 15pt" class=xl65 height=20 width=367>rope, 50ft, 6-7mm OR Tubular Webbing
<TABLE style="WIDTH: 275pt; BORDER-COLLAPSE: collapse" border=0 cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width=367><COLGROUP><COL style="WIDTH: 275pt" width=367><TBODY><TR style="HEIGHT: 15pt" height=20><TD style="WIDTH: 275pt; HEIGHT: 15pt" height=20 width=367>Top Ramen Noodles</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
Understood.
Can't argue with that.
But that is why I asked you to start at 3:15
Let me start by saying that I am glad that you and the boys are alove and well.
Now you are starting to learn why most of us don't ride Yammi's. Weight matters. Even with the weight, you really need to learn how to get a sled unstuck! There are very few times and situations where my boy and I cannot get a sled unstuck. I may be 6'1" and 230, but my boy is 5'5" and 130. Rolling a sled over on its side, and often a full barrel roll will get a sled out of a grave in a matter of seconds rather than minutes or hours. I find it hard to believe that you had 3 sleds and spent that much time to get even the one that was not stuck turned around!!! 2 barrel rolls and a sled with be turned 180 degrees from where you started. You really need to learn more sled skills before heading back into that kind of country. We are seldom in cell coverage most anywhere that we ride. Calling for help is not an option short of riding out out of the mtns and getting in the truck to get to cell coverage and THEN calling for a chopper to get an injured rider out. I cannot imagine calling s+r for a simple stuck situation. A stuck should never become life and death. Have the gear to spend the night, and learn how to deal with a stuck sled. Or tank in you case.
Again, I wish you no harm and glad that things did turn out well. But you have alot to learn about riding sleds and judging your abilities and staying within those foundries to keep you and those with you safe.
AGREED.
I dearly wish I had taken some pictures of the stuck sleds.
My sled was "wedged" between the mountainside and the drift.
Tail up, nose down, rolled to the side in a hole.
The nose was in the next drift, and the hole was perhaps 3-4 feet wide.
There was no where to roll.
The rescuers got it out by brute force, and by creating the extra space needed to turn it. With many hours of digging, I could have made the space to turn it. But I was simply not strong enough to pull it up and backwards to begin the process.
When we stopped working on it, the middle sled had been turned about 90 degrees backwards. Another hour, and I am pretty sure we could have had that one turned around and ready to go, But it was at that point we decided to work on the 3rd sled, as there was no way the 2nd sled could get past the 3rd one. The 3rd sled was the key to getting anything moving, so we focused in on it exclusively.
Again, I wish I had thought to take some photos to show the narrow channel all the sleds were running in. It would help to visualize it.
All that said, someone with better riding skills probably could have pulled it off and never gotten stuck in the first place.
Great list of stuff but if you don't know how to use it properly it is all worthless.
When you separated the group (basic S&R no no) you left two teenage boys alone who did not possess the knowledge to take care of themselves. Which was evident by something as basic as how to properly us a space blanket to keep warm.