Missing persons in OR

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SED
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Post by SED » Wed Dec 13, 2006 5:59 pm

ZaphodBurner wrote: The national interest in this is kind of morbid.

-c

This is exactly my point. Eplaya is a national forum. By propagating this story with hourly updates, it's just like CNN. So to put a point on it, UnjonHarley is turning ePlaya into part of the lame-fuck media frenzy Badger referred to. I'm not going accept that passively.

And as far as the heat seeking drone from Colorado, isn't there something better we can do with those kind of resources? I mean really, New Orleans is still a mess and there are any number of missing children out there, waiting to be found. Doesn't Portland have bigger problems than climbers on Mt. Hood. My suspicion is that it's a telegenic and glamorous way of looking away from less sexy problems. The fact that some guys may be dying right in the middle of it is pretty sick, to me.

Now to hang my nuts even further out there, we have at hand the anniversary of an ePlayan's death. This man was killed while assisting strangers on a rainy nut along a busy freeway. He wasn't part of an SAR team. He was just a hero, without fanfare. His widow was even overlooked at the memorial ceremony at the last Burn, as I recall.

Each rescuer now on Mt. Hood is one less available for anything that might take place on the hum-drum streets of Portland and beyond. But are they out in the rain taking care of people with whom they have less in common than these climbers? No. Will they get free pizza and a human interest story interview on Mt. Hood? More likely.
It ain't the hanging, it's the drop.

SED
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Post by SED » Wed Dec 13, 2006 11:42 pm

It ain't the hanging, it's the drop.

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cowboyangel
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Post by cowboyangel » Thu Dec 14, 2006 5:47 pm

everybody's missing in Oregon these days. Hope the guys on Hood get rescued. I was trapped on Shasta on a winter night in gale winds. It was awful. We had to descend in white-out conditions and we mistakenly went where 3 guys died a few years before in an avalanche gully. But the mountains are still beautiful.

SED
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Post by SED » Thu Dec 14, 2006 7:02 pm

Been to all the summits of every peak mentioned so far in this thread, most in winter, and I'd still rather not be a kidnapped child in Haiti.
It ain't the hanging, it's the drop.

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cowboyangel
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Post by cowboyangel » Fri Dec 15, 2006 8:28 am

Raniere too? I'd like to do that sometime...

SED
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Post by SED » Fri Dec 15, 2006 2:40 pm

Rainier too.
It ain't the hanging, it's the drop.

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joel the ornery
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Post by joel the ornery » Fri Dec 15, 2006 2:54 pm

SED wrote:Rainier too.
up for air, SED?

SED
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Post by SED » Mon Dec 18, 2006 7:10 pm

[spitting blood and bits of broken teeth, (not his own)]


Let's all take a deep breath and celebrate life. Unless you're some kid in Haiti whom the lame-fuck press ignored in favor of the latest Mt. Hood money shot. In that case, you're fucked and nobody cares.
It ain't the hanging, it's the drop.

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Post by SED » Mon Dec 18, 2006 8:04 pm

Here's a quote from Jim Whittaker, first American to summit Everest.

"They were climbers that knew what they were doing. They were just pushing themselves to their farthest frontiers. That's when people are at their best," he said.
ZaphodBurner wrote:By now you know that there are three hikers lost on Mt. Hood. Apparently, December is a great time to hike the mountain, between unusually-violent storms such that the highway to the entire ass-end of the mountain is closed from damage. And since they were in a hurry (storms coming), they chose to "pack light."

No worries. Now there's a storm up there, it's pouring in Portland, and volunteers are right now up stomping around on the ice, wind, driving cold and avalanche hazards looking for people who didn't even bother to check out an emergency locator. They can't launch helicopters because the weather is too severe. Perfect time to come to Oregon from Arkansas and Texas to climb an 11,000-foot peak you've never tried before.

-zb
Maybe do a little more research before you post another such ignorant remark, shit head.
It ain't the hanging, it's the drop.

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dana
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Post by dana » Mon Dec 18, 2006 8:37 pm

SED wrote:Here's a quote from Jim Whittaker, first American to summit Everest.

"They were climbers that knew what they were doing. They were just pushing themselves to their farthest frontiers. That's when people are at their best," he said.
ZaphodBurner wrote:By now you know that there are three hikers lost on Mt. Hood. Apparently, December is a great time to hike the mountain, between unusually-violent storms such that the highway to the entire ass-end of the mountain is closed from damage. And since they were in a hurry (storms coming), they chose to "pack light."

No worries. Now there's a storm up there, it's pouring in Portland, and volunteers are right now up stomping around on the ice, wind, driving cold and avalanche hazards looking for people who didn't even bother to check out an emergency locator. They can't launch helicopters because the weather is too severe. Perfect time to come to Oregon from Arkansas and Texas to climb an 11,000-foot peak you've never tried before.

-zb
Maybe do a little more research before you post another such ignorant remark, shit head.
Now, now SED. Can't be too harsh. Who really understands another person's death? I've been around a few over the years and too close to my own once or twice.
"knowing what you're doing"..... What does that really mean? That you know the risks? That you're more or less prepared? To someone like ZB who doesn't believe in pushing their limits (for admittedly nebulous reasons), the actions of those climbers might seem foolhardy. I've seen a good class 5 kayaker die on class 2. He felt his death prowling around him that morning.... a foreboding, which he chose to ignore. He was prepared - lots of experience, great gear.
A few weeks later I nearly got the chop. A great experience actually. Out of it, I had to decide how very important my life is. I still sometimes like to go back to that moment in my consciousness. I think a part of me needed to die there. A gift really.
The survivors, the grieving family members often find it too hard to comprehend - why someone would take the risks. Blame and denial are natural reactions to grief. We feel grief sometimes even when it is not someone we knew personally. Like when 9/11 happened, the first reaction of seeing the news footage was - "This doesn't even look real." Denial - 1st stage of grief.

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Bin Noddin
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Post by Bin Noddin » Mon Dec 18, 2006 8:43 pm

why someone would take the risks
If it was just their risk, up to them - they looked for the edge and ended up tumbling over it. But now scores of others are risking their lives on that mountain to bring them down. Big waste.
"I have gobs of mustard and ketchup on the front of my shirt, which does not make me a hot dog." Sam A. McKeen

SED
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Post by SED » Mon Dec 18, 2006 8:50 pm

dana wrote:
SED wrote:Here's a quote from Jim Whittaker, first American to summit Everest.

"They were climbers that knew what they were doing. They were just pushing themselves to their farthest frontiers. That's when people are at their best," he said.
ZaphodBurner wrote:By now you know that there are three hikers lost on Mt. Hood. Apparently, December is a great time to hike the mountain, between unusually-violent storms such that the highway to the entire ass-end of the mountain is closed from damage. And since they were in a hurry (storms coming), they chose to "pack light."

No worries. Now there's a storm up there, it's pouring in Portland, and volunteers are right now up stomping around on the ice, wind, driving cold and avalanche hazards looking for people who didn't even bother to check out an emergency locator. They can't launch helicopters because the weather is too severe. Perfect time to come to Oregon from Arkansas and Texas to climb an 11,000-foot peak you've never tried before.

-zb
Maybe do a little more research before you post another such ignorant remark, shit head.
Now, now SED. Can't be too harsh. Who really understands another person's death?
Of course, nobody understands another's death. My point is that ZB didn't understand these climbers' lives before he began to pass judgement. Before any facts were known, ZB assumed that these men were vacationing twits from afar who disregarded the risks and their own limitations. No less a figure than Jim Whittaker has now affirmed that they were adequately trained and equipped, and behaved well under pressure.

Big waste, you say. I agree.
It ain't the hanging, it's the drop.

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cowboyangel
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Post by cowboyangel » Mon Dec 18, 2006 11:23 pm

Kelly James according to Ed Schultz on the Jones Radio Network reported that James had climbed McKinley 12 times. I've done it twice. I have alot of respect for someone who'se done Denali 12X. The guy had the experience. We may never know what really happened, but according to one news report, James felt that he was closest to God when climbing. That's ok. I understand that. Another report said that he may have broken his arm. 100 mile, below zero-high altitude, zero visibility conditions are the most shitty thing anyone can ever experience. If you can't boil snow to make water, you're fucked. This may have happened to them. They may have been caught on the summit without enough gear as the storm hit. I don't climb with an approaching storm. period. Some people do, and take the chance, perhaps thinking that they can beat it. Mountains let us climb them, we don't conquer them, as some think.
Hood is a fucker too. Many people have died there. http://www.traditionalmountaineering.or ... alFall.htm
To those who think this is a waste, I say there are more things wastefull than climbing tragedies-gang violence, Iraq war casualties to name a few.
For me climbing is a spiritual experience. Climbers are all different and climb for different reasons. But I think I can appreciate many of those reasons because I've done it. Most of the climbers I know, approach climbing with respect, caution and experience. My heart goes out to the families of these guys. Blessings to the great rescue teams involved in trying to save them. Hood like Shasta, has seen an explosion of climber numbers. This sometimes contributes to accidents. The Gov has to start getting serious about limiting the number of climbers on the mountain and perhaps do better pre-climb checking, like insisting on teams carrying transponders and radios- especially on winter climbs. Maybe emergency caches can be strategically placed on all or some of the Cascade volcanoes too. McKinley has this. They too are going to limit the number of climbers starting this coming year too I think.
My friend Phil Arnot, climber, guide, author, B-17 pilot in WWII, is fond of saying when we get out of the wilderness or finish a climb, "now be careful, you're about to go on the most dangerous part of the trip....the car ride home"....
"We'll know our disinformation program is complete when everything the American public believe is false."- William Casey, CIA Director 1981

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dana
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Post by dana » Mon Dec 18, 2006 11:25 pm

Bin Noddin wrote:
why someone would take the risks
If it was just their risk, up to them - they looked for the edge and ended up tumbling over it. But now scores of others are risking their lives on that mountain to bring them down. Big waste.
Actually I don't think that's an accurate assessment - that others taking the risk to save them is a waiste. There are many that die trying to save someone else. But they decide to take that risk, again maybe for nebulous reasons. (Because they like to feel useful, to be the hero, because it seems like the "right thing" to do, or because they also are climbers and know they would appreciate someone saving their ass..... whatever.) The worst waiste is a life lived poorly - however it ends.

Sometimes those people who want to help can also mean your death. Search and rescue operations are often too slow and cumbersome to be of much real use. I remember one time when search and rescue was slowly dragging tons of gear up to rescue someone on Flagstaff with a head injury. He was already on the ground, not far from the road and could have easily been scooped by an ambulance. I hate to think what the delay may have eventually cost that guy in brain function. Climbers always used to say that if you were injured, you better get your friends to drag you out, rather than S&R.

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Post by SED » Tue Dec 19, 2006 8:04 am

Since we're telling stories, I have a couple that might fit.

My girlfriend and I were climbing in an area near El Paso, Texas. We came upon an injured climber (broken ankle) and his partner and we went for help, leading the rangers to the site. By that time, no fewer than 13 ambulances were waiting in the parking lot to take one man back to El Paso. Eventually, a National Guard helicopter came and flew the dude off. I asked one EMT crew who was standing by his idling ambulance about all the fuss. He told me that every EMR crew gets the same call and that the dispatcher doesn't pick one, so they all go, especially if it means a pleasant drive to the country rather than another routine stabbing or shooting in the barrio. It also turned out that private ambulance companies charge thousands for a ride to the ER. The chopper was free--to the climber. He was a german and got his ride courtesy of U.S. tax payers.

Another time I was in Yosemite, climbing Middle Cathedral tower. It's a beautiful formation, but one of the guys I was with was blind, so were weren't going too quickly. We heard a tremendous boom from up the valley and assumed it was just thunder. Well, a massive chunk of granite had fallen away and wiped out a large area of forest near a camp ground. One guy died. We didn't know that, of course, but we did watch as a dozen or so ambulances screamed up the road. This caused us some concern for what may have happened, but also because it indicated to us that if we fucked up, nobody would be available for our rescue. Or for anyone else, including a kid choking on a hot dog, an elderly man with a heart attack, a head on collision, whatever.

What do these stories mean? They mean that the high-glam cases get a disproportionate amount of attention from EMS, the media, and any fool with a keyboard and internet access. The mundane, ugly and far more numerous events are just as real, and the lives involved are just as meaningful.

Maybe we can shift out attention to members of the Burner community who are in trouble, and their families. James Kim (remember him?) was meaningful to me because some of us knew him. I didn't, but that didn't matter to me. Let's find out who knew him, and reach out to his wife and children.

And finally, I'm going to Portland this week. Please pray for me. It sounds dangerous out there.
It ain't the hanging, it's the drop.

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cowboyangel
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Post by cowboyangel » Tue Dec 19, 2006 8:12 am

just stay away from Hood...for now.......
"We'll know our disinformation program is complete when everything the American public believe is false."- William Casey, CIA Director 1981

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Jewel***
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Post by Jewel*** » Tue Dec 19, 2006 11:57 am

Thanks for the story SED, there were tears in my eyes the whole time....

Girlfriend? I didn't hear about her.

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dana
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Post by dana » Wed Dec 20, 2006 8:41 pm

SED wrote: Of course, nobody understands another's death. My point is that ZB didn't understand these climbers' lives before he began to pass judgement. Before any facts were known, ZB assumed that these men were vacationing twits from afar who disregarded the risks and their own limitations. No less a figure than Jim Whittaker has now affirmed that they were adequately trained and equipped, and behaved well under pressure.

Big waste, you say. I agree.
SED, you were recently seen around the eplaya grousing about the lack of stimulation lately. Maybe I can give you a bit of a challenge for a good answer that gets at the heart of this thread's drift. You sometimes write some nicely coherant comments, so here's the classic question for us risk takers. Why? You see I don't completely disagree with Zaphod. Those guys were taking a risk from what I understand. Winter can often be the best time to do some of those climbs (like Yokum ridge when it's covered in rime ice.) But it is definitely more dicey. From what I've noticed, most risk takers generally hedge when confronted by the real possibility that their sport could get them whacked. I don't place too much faith in what Whittaker has to say. He always sounded a little "rah rah, go team!" to me. The best commentary about risk taking I read came from Chounard, who questioned how much of his successes was pure hubris and how much being just plain good.
When I was in college, some guy who really seemed pretty clueless claimed that I had a death wish underlying my desire to climb. At the time, it seemed assinine because I couldn't see any such thing in myself. But coming very close to dying (or at least having a very bad close call) in 2001, I actually finally understood what a death wish really is. You see when that guy first made that claim, I didn't know how to divide out different parts of myself and see that they actually have their own voices and agendas. I finally realized that the "death wish" is that part of any of us that wants to feel like a victim to their life, feeling like you'll never reach your dreams and will always have to deal with too many disasters, dissapointments and frustration. That part of me, was OK with throwing in the towel. It was like a drain on my psychic energy, a ready slippery slope when things fell apart, falling into despair. So.... that part died. No shit. It was kind of an epiphany. But now it seems I can't push it so hard. (On the other hand my life is also really coming together these days, so it makes me wonder.) But I think back now to some of those times.... Holy shit! One time putting up a new route in the Cirque of Towers, leading 10b or c (pretty much my limit then), about 90 feet out from my last piece of manky pro which was the only thing between me and my belayer.... And I felt like Jesus walking on water. I was ON that day. Now the question is - was that delusion, hubris.... or was I really on? Other times when things just seemed to go beyond... blows the mind. (And then there are other times when I'm totally nervous and start walking around all kinds of rapids!)
And this is part of my thoughts about all of this. We climb (or kayak, or?) for some obvious reasons (feels good doing something so physical, the places are beautiful, the challenge, etc.) But why do we need to take it close to the edge? There is something about the intensity that shows us absolutely how alive we are. But do we get addicted to that particular need for the edge because we don't know how to feel that intensity in enough other parts of our lives? (That was one of the things that came out of my "epiphany" - being able to really look that square in the face.)

Oh yeah, Cowboy, I'm curious what you might have to say about this as well since you're another climber/philosopher.

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Post by SED » Thu Dec 21, 2006 7:12 am

I think you answer your own questions, Dana. Why do we take unneccesary risks for fun and profit? Because of the fun and the profit.

In my case, I stopped adventuring when I began to have children. Not so much out of fear that I might die and leave them fatherless, but because they were more fun to hang around with. And I also came to understand that talking about the adventures was actually more fun than having them in the first place. We're really talking about ourselves and how cool we are.


As far this thread goes, my only point is this: There was nothing that made the lives of the guys on Mt. Hood more important than anybody else's, so why all the fuss? Well, I guess there's a little spectator in all of us, and there's nothing like a rumor to keep the tension high. That's why I attacked those who kept the story going here.

The AP reported that the mother of one climber declined to speak about her son's death. What the fuck is that? News? Brittany's crotch photos are news. Both are slimey.
It ain't the hanging, it's the drop.

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