RVs often tow a smaller vehicle so that once they are parked somewhere for the night, they can drive to a store or trailhead etc in a vehicle that isn't so hard to maneuver and which gets much better gas mileage.If I understand correctly only Ronnie was a driver. What was the point of the second vehicle?
<snip> Generally speaking, is it too much of an overreaction to advise RV/motorhome drivers to consider getting a PLB? (personal locator beacon). Has that been advised before? </snip>
Missing couple’s family frustrated with local law enforcement | KLAS
I am interested in knowing if there are lessons to be learned/changes to make for SAR and missing persons procedures.
The biggest issue (most likely) was the long delay in issuing a Silver Alert because the NV policy didn't allow for non-residents and it took them a few days to make an exception. Obviously that should be an easy change to make, a quicker process for exceptions..
One of the recent stories (source) says that Ronnie/Beverly saw other cars, including another RV, as they were driving along rt. 265. If a Silver Alert had been issued quicker, would that have helped? On the FB group, some truckers mentioned checking their dashcams...it was also mentioned that it was such footage (from a dashcam) that led to the big break for the Gabby Petito case.
Generally speaking, is it too much of an overreaction to advise RV/motorhome drivers to consider getting a PLB? (personal locator beacon). Has that been advised before?
They apparently had planned a drive from Mt Shasta KOA to the Desert Eagle RV Park in Las Vegas on Sunday March 27
This is an 11 hour drive without any stops, so realistically it is a 12 + hour drive.
If what you say BBM above is true, why? What would make getting to Desert Eagle RB Park that same day, assuming they left CA at noon, worth the fatigue, having to refuel at night, being on the (I assume) unfamiliar roads in darkness, etc.?They apparently had planned a drive from Mt Shasta KOA to the Desert Eagle RV Park in Las Vegas on Sunday March 27
This is an 11 hour drive without any stops, so realistically it is a 12 + hour drive.
I drive a lot in the California-Nevada area and that drive is about 5 hours too long for me, even with a second driver. My choice would have been to stop in the curious and unique Tonopah NV for the night. I have to think they were also getting tired at that point, too.
They apparently, and this is just what I have read so I may be incorrect, had not contacted family or friends in this journey so there were no real personal confirmations of their plans or progress since the gas-up in Stagecoach.
That was what was so difficult about the first 72 hours - there was no real “last” personal sighting or contact and it was entirely plausible that they had run into a person that wished them harm, stolen their vehicles and were out of the state by then.
I’m so very sad it turned out this way. The altitude and the cold were undoubtedly uncomfortable for Ronnie, who clearly had always been a very capable man.
But please, RV’rs, you don’t really need a $350 satellite phone and monthly subscription if you just keep contact with relatives or friends and update them on your progress, especially if you seem to deviate from a main road.
In Esmeralda County, Nevada about 98% of the traffic is on either Highway 95 or 6. Knowing they were safe and in their own vehicle at the intersection of 95 and 6 ( aka; Coaldale NV) would really have made a world of difference in the search for them.
As a couple who have owned a motorhome, I can tell you that it is great, everything you need on wheels! However…..many people pull a small car behind it because, well, its everything you need on wheels and its a honking BIG machine. Once you stop at a campground, you hook up to electricity, water, cable, and sewer. Its a royal pain to unhook everything whenyou want to take a mini trip sightseeing or to the store. So you hook up the monster and make it your base camp while you use the small car for side trips, or city visits.If I understand correctly only Ronnie was a driver. What was the point of the second vehicle?
They seemed to have a plan to meet friends in Tucson on March 29. That only allowed two days from Shasta, CA to there. (27th Shasta to Vegas/ 28th Vegas to Tucson).That 12+ hour trip sounds horrendous. All I can say is “Whyyyyyyy”. That takes all the fun out of RVing.
They seemed to have a plan to meet friends in Tucson on March 29. That only allowed two days from Shasta, CA to there. (27th Shasta to Vegas/ 28th Vegas to Tucson).
Guessing Vegas was their idea of halfway point to make the destination on the day planned. If that date of arrival was set in stone for some reason, that would explain the long haul on the 27th. JMO
ETA Google shows driving distance Vegas to Tucson is 6.25 hours.
Surprising that they didn't think to bring water bottles, juice and snacks in the car ... since the RV was stuck in the mud (be prepared) ... and weren't they both on medication for diabetes? Nine days away from the RV, or did they stay put for a couple of day and wait for someone to use the "find my phone" app? Was it nine days in the car?
I think that is true of many situations in life, we're familiar with people having car accidents, getting lost, falling off high places...those situations are familiar, simple lapses in judgement, people know how they happen and how to prevent them, so they aren't a topic of much discussion.I think it’s wise to remember that any of us can have a simple lapse in judgement that could put us in a life or death situation. It’s easy to look at a story like this, removed from the immediate emotional impact of it, and wax poetic about what you would or wouldn’t have done and tsk tsk about what the victims did. But, they’re just that- victims. Good people who made an error that cost them. I’m sure there is nothing that can be said here that Bev and the family don’t already realize.
MOO
Thank you Satchie. I agree.I think that is true of many situations in life, we're familiar with people having car accidents, getting lost, falling off high places...those situations are familiar, simple lapses in judgement, people know how they happen and how to prevent them, so they aren't a topic of much discussion.
Whereas, IMO, this situation is almost unprecedented, at least not since the earliest days of GPS, I think it's a natural use of human intelligence and a mechanism for suvival to analyse such a situation to try to understand how it could have happened and how such things could be prevented.
(I prefer to focus on prevention than what should be done to save other people who do the same thing...I hope it doesn't become a trend).
We don't say, "Let's not talk about preventing Covid because it's hurtful to the people who caught it and died from it".
JMO
I think it’s wise to remember that any of us can have a simple lapse in judgement that could put us in a life or death situation. It’s easy to look at a story like this, removed from the immediate emotional impact of it, and wax poetic about what you would or wouldn’t have done and tsk tsk about what the victims did. But, they’re just that- victims. Good people who made an error that cost them. I’m sure there is nothing that can be said here that Bev and the family don’t already realize.
MOO
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