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That was me on the darkness in the valley where the refuge was. It would be a lot darker there sooner than the historic daylight stats for that area would have you believe. A lot colder and damper, too.But wouldn’t she be pushing it a bit in terms of remaining daylight if she bypassed the refuge? I would think she’d have to have a pretty good reason.
One of you great sleuths on this thread...and there are many...posted an article that talked about long shadows of darkness on the mountains as daylight receded. Esther would have been familiar with this. My feeling is that whatever happened...occurred between her descent of the summit and her trip to the refuge.
Since the refuge was open—and that was her plan and her habit—I can't imagine ED wouldn't stay at the refuge, even for the simple reason that you can cook (or boil water) without freezing your duff (you can't cook in a tent, because of CO and the dangers of open flame). Plus, if dampness gets to your tent (e.g. with dew or frost), you don't have to schlepp it on your hike while wet, which is a total pain in the butt.
Indoors in a refuge, even without heat, would give you maybe 10+ degrees more warmth than a tent IMO. In those conditions, you almost certainly would use the refuge if it was available. You could get even warmer if you pitched your tent inside the refuge.
At a refuge, too, you can sit around and relax, putter about... An ultralight backpacking tent isn't my favorite place for kicking back, and with a 6 pm arrival there were a lot of hours to kill before bed time. I'd have been making tea in the refuge, cups and cups of hot tea....
And if there's a bear squatted on the refuge doorstep so the refuge is unusable? Am I going to unfurl my tent nearby? Ha!
IMO I can't imagine ED got to the refuge and didn't stop. Accident up slope, methinks, or right nearby.
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