Without diving deeply back into this, I'm getting a vibe she seems to have taken an alternate trail that morning..is that what others are sensing?
JMO
Good article, @Unalienable Rights .
Paraphrasing some of what the rest of the article says:
The backpack was not on the Kumano Kodo Kohechi trail, but off another trail.
The entry to this trail is close to the one she was supposed to be on.
Pattie’s husband said that (his opinion) the Kohechi wasn’t well marked until after Pattie went missing. Yet it’s hard for him to imagine Pattie making this mistake.
This ‘incorrect’ trail near where her things were found was actually searched before. It was a treacherous one. They had calculated at that time that if she fell, she would fall on the left.
The backpack was located on the right.
Oh, thanks, I missed that.Your question answered:
Oh, thanks, I missed that.
I doubt that Patti made a mistake. She'd perhaps been 'plodding' along official trails for many days, and liked to explore/take photos for a while in the morning before leaving the village.
JMO
Perhaps.Not so sure about that. Apparently Pattie went North, roughly backwards in the direction of where she had come from the previous day, instead of South on the next leg of the Kohechi trail.
Perhaps.
I just feel the cases with sad endings I've followed - say Julian Barnes or Esther Dingley - it's the skilled hiker who is ambitious, who deliberately goes onto a dangerous trail, rather than a cautious hiker who is confused and trying to find help.
JMO
I agree. I believe that she made a very common mistake that can be made by almost anyone, and took the wrong trail early on. For whatever reason, she likely didn’t realize for a while. Then was down quite a ways when she either 1. Suffered a devastating injury/medical event/fall from the trail 2. Started panicking about her wrong location, and attempted to navigate back to the original trail, and then had the injury/medical event fall. I am not certain which is most likely based on location, and her remains are scattered anyway. We will likely never know. But I’ll hold our hope that maybe more remains and belongings will be found and more insight can be gathered.Pattie was supposed to be on her way to the next guesthouse where she had a reservation, because that is how it works at the Kohechi trail and the other trails of the Kumano Kodo. Strictly organized. You make your reservations before the start.
IMO she took the wrong trail by mistake ~ or someone took her ~ but deviating deliberately from the trail and going backwards instead of forward is not a viable option.
Yes of course. I have done a lot of multi-day backpacking/walking trips, myself.Pattie was supposed to be on her way to the next guesthouse where she had a reservation, because that is how it works at the Kohechi trail and the other trails of the Kumano Kodo. Strictly organized. You make your reservations before the start.
IMO she took the wrong trail by mistake ~ or someone took her ~ but deviating deliberately from the trail and going backwards instead of forward is not a viable option.
This is a map provided by the family on the Help Find Pattie page, except I added in red text in English where Pattie last stayed and therefore started out from last, and where the next guesthouse she was going to stay at that evening. I think the areas in the thicker red mostly follows the trail she was supposed to be hiking on (I think it may be the areas searched). The Post-it points to where the backpack was found. The femur bone was found somewhere in the general area of the backpack.Are there any maps displaying Patti’s supposed route versus where her body was found?
I also wonder if the remains have any indication that could suggest her cause of death, for example a skull fracture or fractured leg. It doesn’t seem like it from the articles. But curious.
..... it turns out she was heading in entirely the wrong direction: north instead of south. Not only up entirely the wrong track, but up the wrong mountain!
Could she have left extra early to hike part of that loop first, before heading south to her next guesthouse? If guesthouse to guesthouse was 17 km, that could take anywhere from 6-9 hours depending on trail difficulty. Maybe she'd figured out how long it would take her and thought she had time to head north first to catch a view or something.This is a map provided by the family on the Help Find Pattie page, except I added in red text in English where Pattie last stayed and therefore started out from last, and where the next guesthouse she was going to stay at that evening. I think the areas in the thicker red mostly follows the trail she was supposed to be hiking on (I think it may be the areas searched). The Post-it points to where the backpack was found. The femur bone was found somewhere in the general area of the backpack.
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That's not correct. Interpol is a body which facilitates cooperation between police forces around the world and can therefore be involved in whatever police work those forces bring to its attention. It does, for instance, issue Yellow Notices for missing/abducted persons and Black Notices for UIDs to draw attention to these cases across international and jurisdictional boundaries.Jurisdiction and sovereignty issues.
Interpol is mostly for fugitives.
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