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I would expect such an experienced and solo hiking outdoorswoman to have a GPS(watch) with her. Newer models can be accessed from a laptop/pc to find its nearest known location, and some can even send out an emergency notification to an paired cellphone if the watch breaks after a fall/crash for example. I wonder if she had one of those, it might be a great help in locating her.
Also, its not really clear to me if she did reach the refuge she was planning on staying that last night or not. Did she ever made it there?
I'm hoping she had extra clothing, an emergency blanket and water or a water purifier with her and is taking warm shelter somewhere with an injury or so. Fingers crossed she will be found alive!
Is it expect to be foul play or an accident at this moment?
Noting:Searches are being scaled back. Im very fearful that this will be a body recovery, which might be spring next year because of the weather. .Gendarmes to scale down search for British hiker Esther Dingley in Pyrenees
Noting:
[...]
“We have looked all over our side and our colleagues in Spain have been doing the same,” Pierre Gaillard, the deputy commander of the high-mountain gendarmerie platoon told the Guardian.
“Today, we sent a helicopter up over the high ranges, but this is an area we have already searched. It’s complicated to find someone up there because part of the area is under snow. The Spanish are doing the same on their side.
“The weather is good today and it’s not possible that she went missing because she was caught up in bad weather, because the only time it was bad was the night of Thursday to Friday when there was snowfall and ice, but we were already looking for her by then.”
[...]
Gaillard said the gendarmes had not been able to ascertain where Dingley had gone missing. Her last contact with Colegate was via a WhatsApp call on Sunday 22 November, when she indicated she was on the Pic de Sauvegarde.
“After that she put her phone on airplane mode to save the battery and there is no data use or GPS trace since then. Theoretically her itinerary meant she should have done the loop and crossed into France before returning, but we cannot say for sure. We have no indication of whether she crossed the border or not,” Gaillard said.
[...]
“If she stayed on the paths she shouldn’t have had a problem, but sometimes with the snow and ice at altitude it’s difficult to follow the paths,” Gaillard said, adding that Dingley was wearing dark clothes and carrying a grey rucksack, which added to the difficulties in finding her. He said there was no sign of her yellow tent to suggest she had been camping out.
He said that Colegate, also from Durham, was also searching the mountain and had retraced Dingley’s route but was not with the rescue teams.
“He prefers to walk on his own,” the gendarme said.
[...]
“We are not just mountain rescuers, we also investigate so we are keeping all lines of inquiry open.” He said the chances of finding her were now “extremely slim”.
He added: “We will be sending a smaller team out to search tomorrow but after that, bad weather is forecast including heavy snowfall.”
[...]
I was just wondering if there a general feeling re carrying or having satellite phones/GPS/other tracking electronic devices among serious and experienced hikers like Esther. If their intention is to disconnect from the world for a few days and “ be one with nature” would carrying any of these be contrary to that goal?
Also, I wonder how often Esther and her partner would each hike on their own?
I hope she is safe and found soon!
This is awful, what a shame Esther was wearing dark/grey clothes. Was she not carrying a flare or GPS? No safety system in place for a solo walker seems unlikely, especially as she's so experienced.
Looking at the Pic de Sauvegarde on google earth, it is relatively sparse up there, no thick forest or anything. I assume she didn't have chance to use the yellow tent to attract attention.
Do we know if she was using the walking route mapped out by google (approx 9 miles), or going straight from A to B along the ridge which forms the country border, which would place her at Sauvegarde? (approx 2 miles)
Google Maps
Sad to say, many people hike for years without changing their basic methods (we just recently switched to wearing brighter colors...DH only got his first GPS thingie this year - he's almost 60). We're both experienced, but we learned from various places (including WS) that we had a way to go in changing how we do things. I now wear a very loud whistler - but just started recently.
I am pretty good with a compass, for example, but...youtube has taught me there's more I need to know if I decide to go solo hiking. My solo hikes are day hikes, but a person can get into real trouble in just one day.
IOW, experience is something that often lags behind reality out in the wilderness. It is odd that there's no thick forest or any other cover - ravines seem to be the only place someone could fall and not be seen.
This is a very sad case and I sure hope they have good reason to rule out foul play.
It would seem a fall is the most likely explanation, but it's still strange she's not been found.
It's not strange. The mountains give the people back, alive or dead, when they want to. There were many cases of dead bodies laying nearby busy trails, unspotted for decades.
In the Pyrenees?
Unfortunately I'm thinking that it must have been a catastrophic event of some kind. Otherwise, Esther had the option to switch her phone back from airplane mode to be tracked. Presuming she had battery left.
That is something i could imagine happening, or the phone dropped from her hand and she slipped trying to retrieve it. speculation, imo.A thought just occurred to me... I noticed a lot of photos of her jumping on mountaintops on their blog. Maybe that’s something Esther did regularly after reaching a summit regardless if there is someone with her to document it. Could it be possible she jumped, lost her footing and fell right after that last selfie was taken? Moo