MAR 13, 2021
Body Of Missing Glendale Woman, Narineh Avakian, Found – CBS Los Angeles (cbslocal.com)
The body of a missing 37-year-old Glendale woman was found Saturday, police said.
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The cause of Avakian’s death is still under investigation.
MAR 12, 2021
Searchers Looking For Missing Glendale Woman in Angeles National Forest - MyNewsLA.com
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About 3 p.m. Thursday, the vehicle was located parked at the Buckhorn Day Use Area along Angeles Crest Highway, Hauptmann said.
“It should be noted that this area was heavily impacted by the recent snow storm,” he said.
“Upon locating Narineh’s vehicle, search-and-rescue personnel from the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department were immediately deployed with a large contingency of sworn and volunteer personnel,” Hauptmann said. “Their search efforts continued as approximately 12 feet of snow fell overnight; but due to the worsening weather conditions, the search was terminated around 2 a.m. this morning. A few hours later, the search was able to resume with even more resources and is currently active.”
Glendale police investigators were sent to examine the vehicle and have it towed back to the police station for further processing, Hauptmann said.
“At this time, there is no suspicion of foul play,” Hauptmann said. ...
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Buckhorn Day Use Area - Google Maps
Which was the other one?That's 2 missing female "hikers" on opposite coasts of the country found deceased....within days of each other. So much sadness all over the place.RIP Narineh
IMO the smartest route to safe hiking is to go out many times with a hiking club (e.g. Sierra Club, local mountaineering group) with VERY experienced old timers (e.g. folks in their 70's). Even if you're a couple or a cluster of friends, go out with these folks first. This is how you learn to stay safe in the wilderness, because they've seen and done it all. Listen to their stories as well as their advice.After following David Paulides and his Missing 411 about hikers who disappear, and following so many threads here lately, I am pretty sure I’m not going anywhere more remote than the mall any more.
I’ve learned so many things following cases of missing hikers/hunters - and first and foremost tell someone exactly where you’re going, and when you plan to return.
Do we even know Narineh made it to a park, etc.? It doesn’t sound like they’ve located her vehicle, so it’s possible she didn’t go where she intended to go? Whether by choice or not sadly.
Going to see if I can find possible day hiking areas near her.
All MOO, speculation, and a newfound fear of the outdoors.
IMO the smartest route to safe hiking is to go out many times with a hiking club (e.g. Sierra Club, local mountaineering group) with VERY experienced old timers (e.g. folks in their 70's). Even if you're a couple or a cluster of friends, go out with these folks first. This is how you learn to stay safe in the wilderness, because they've seen and done it all. Listen to their stories as well as their advice.
Too many times, IMO, friends and family think a hiker(s) is "experienced" because maybe they've been hiking many times, but often the "experience" isn't relevant to the situation. As I say, learn it from the mouths of outdoors folks who've already encountered a gazzillion tricky situations in the backcountry.
Oh, and if you ever meet a SAR member, invite them over for dinner. Let them talk the ENTIRE time. They will have opinions that could very well save your life. And they will have stories that will make your meal a pleasure. IME
Here is the hiker I was referring to:Good advice, though as I was googling Narineh to find information on her case, I saw that she did belong to a local hiking group (saw their FB page with the notice of “one of our members” being missing).
Like you, I wondered who the other hiker was that @zecats mentions who was recently found deceased on the other side of the country. I don’t think I’m aware of that case.
I live close by a network of trails that I enjoy hiking on, almost daily (day hikes). My strategy when I just started discovering them all was this: a little at a time. I’d have a map of the trail, first, and walked the most straightforward path for the longest time without veering. Gradually, I’d add and discover a different fork off the main path I already knew by walking on it then turning around to go back to the main path I was by now very familiar with. In time, I got to know practically all the trails there.
I would encounter many throughout my days there who seem to go in without a plan. They ask for directions because they don’t know the way back to where they wanted to be. And, as I stated in an earlier post, I start out in the morning. Most hikers on the trails I go to do the same, so if I am solo there’s a good chance I’ll see others. I have tried a couple of times to do it in the afternoon, but it felt creepier with no one else around.
Here is the hiker I was referring to:
Found Deceased - PA - Nicole Ebaugh, 29, missing from park, Springfield Twp, 6 Mar 2021
It's an obvious error in reporting and should read "12 inches." It happens. MOO12 FEET of snow? How was it even possible to find her?