CuriousHousewife
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Has anyone been able to find any media reports to verify LB's claim that the car was found last night? I can't find anything.
Has anyone been able to find any media reports to verify LB's claim that the car was found last night? I can't find anything.
64 miles Southwest of the main gate? I don't think that is anywhere near the boundary of Dugway. ETA: corrected above because I got my NW and SW confused, sorry! ETA 2: I'm really confused and removed comment. Off for more coffee!
http://www.deseretnews.com/article/...ife-in-search-for-missing-Dugway-soldier.html
(snip)
Kevin Bushling said he got a call Sunday morning about the car being found 64 miles southwest of Dugway's main gate. The director of the Dugway police department "told me he was assigning people areas" to search.
I think this story is exactly as appears. people who have training do not always have common sense. trust me. the weather has been mild. it has been raining. I PRAY that they find him soon, while he may still be alive. People commonly pull off the road when they run out of gas, your car starts to sputter so you do pull off, it has happened to me before once. GPS doesn't always tell you exactly where you are either, I've had those also, it will tell you the road name if you are on a marked road but not all rural roads are on gps and they won't always indicate exactly where you are if there are no distinguishing features on a very long road. what if he went offroading thinking he could get back by gps and was lost as well? he was west of granite it looks like- just very very far west, southwest. why call at all if you are going AWOL? who goes awol from nursing school? it would be such a tragedy for this family to lose another son. he could be a hundred miles in the middle of nowhere by now.
GPS doesn't always work out in the SW as it does in other parts of the USA. Just speaking from personal experience.
I also have had issues with using it in a large city here in HI where the streets are so close together the satellite appears to have some difficulty determining exactly where my car with the GPS is located---resulting in driving in circles for a good amount of time until I can get onto a fairly large mainroad and then it will pick up my signal from my car.
Here is another problem that I can think of in regard to his GPS use on a military instillation. Many times the roads on a military instillation especially the roads that are out in the range areas or lead into the training areas or remote areas of that instillation are not public knowledge (for a reason) they don't show up on GPS. In fact, the main roads on the instillation that I live on now are only shown and are designated on google maps as restricted access roads. The home I live in is just about 2 yrs old. I live in a new housing area and my street is not on GPS yet. I have to give directions to the pizza delivery guy once he gets to a certain landmark on post and direct him by phone to my home.
Just some food for thought about the GPS. HTH all just my experiences and humble opinion.
I don't have a good feeling about this... I fear that they may find him out there... otherwise he had to have someone assist him in leaving the area.
I'm sorry, I wasn't clear.
GPS units work off latitude and longitude; I've never seen one that wouldn't display those numbers.
That's what he needed to tell his friend: the latitude and longitude.
On a rental car, it was "where am I?" and on one of our Garmins, it's "show location". I've not played with our newer Garmins, but I'm sure it's there. It's the most basic feature of all.
In the early days of GPS road navigation, you had to put in the numbers (rather than the address)! Some RV parks don't even show an address on their web page - they just give you the coordinates. I hate that.
You're right that the roads in newer developments won't show up (but map updates are available - tell the pizza guy!).
The roads out in Utah's west desert are old roads -- and our Garmins (multiple) pick them up. Generally, if you can see it on Google Maps, your GPS has the information.
The roads within Dugway and the surrounding desert area, show up on Google Maps (Click Here to view) .
(respectful snippage)
Check the comment from "cosmic bullets" here, under the Salt Lake Tribune stock (click here).
It IS strange to see someone just walking INTO town from there, because there's no "there" to be from....out there.
I had seen that. I'm not convinced it's him, it certainly could be, but we'll just have to wait and see. white male doesn't seem like much of a description to give an accurate identification. he will be found (hopefully) alive or no...I don't think this will become a long term case.
Thanks Laytonian!
I wonder what his MOS was in the military, did I miss his job? If so I apologize.
Depending on his MOS he may or may not have worked with coordinates before.
Just puzzling out why if he had a GPS he was so lost. Not shooting down anyone's theories just playing around with possibilities
I've been thinking about him a bit, I have a soft spot for soldiers, esp. young ones. (it's the momma in me I can't help it!) and I hope and pray that for some reason he has disappeared through his own volition. I've seen a couple of cases where that has happened but I lived at Fort Hood when we lost a soldier out on the range too, it was in 2007 and he veered from his range of coordinates and became lost disoriented and lost his life. Very sad.
all JMHO
He was a medic, but not previously stationed in a combat zone. He was due to transfer to nursing, which would be good training for the future.
He'd have had basic training.
Since the GPS was left in the car, I'm thinking it was his own unit and hopefully, he knew how to use it. Its history can be analyzed. Even if he didn't put in a destination, as long as it was "on" - it knows where you've been.
I'm hoping for the best here; desertion is almost the best option.
He was a medic, but not previously stationed in a combat zone. He was due to transfer to nursing, which would be good training for the future.
He'd have had basic training.
Since the GPS was left in the car, I'm thinking it was his own unit and hopefully, he knew how to use it. Its history can be analyzed. Even if he didn't put in a destination, as long as it was "on" - it knows where you've been.
I'm hoping for the best here; desertion is almost the best option.