RickshawFan
Verified Outdoor Recreation Specialist
- Joined
- Jun 9, 2013
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There are many trails in the universe that someone fit could manage well (this would certainly be one), but those abilities are moot if the risks are too high to survive. I don't believe what went wrong here had anything to do with hiking fitness.
With temperatures below freezing at night, in this exposed location, with no way to get out of fog, sleet, breeze, or a sudden snow squall, this was not "within the capabilities" of a solo hiker with little food who even had trouble pitching the flimsy, summer, tarptent (per her own photos).
There were so many ways to get hypothermic on this trip. Even making the "minor" mistake of not removing your sweat-soaked next-to-the-skin layer after trudging uphill could make you hypothermic. She could have got into taking off clothes, and in a hypothermic state didn't put any on. This is not unusual, and there was no one else there to set her right or warm up next to.
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