GregW
Active member
That's some nice iron you got to test drive, throwing the turbo out of the mix cause that's cheatin, which of the litter was your favourite?
it was a ravine in the back of keyhole, not clemina.I wasn't going to post this as its a little embarassing being "those guys" bbuuttt.. last night me and another guy had to spend the night on the hill. long story but we got into a spot we could not get out of. we tried for hours and we finally ran out of daylight and energy. managed to get a hold of SAR but were told we had to spend the night. so we dug a cave and built a fire. keeping that fire going was a full time job for both of us. we had saved a bit of food and Gatorade. we cut some.spruce branches to sit on to keep us up off the snow. I'm not sure what the temp was but told it was around -25. keeping each other spirits up and constsntly moving to cut wood helped a lot with the cold. needless to say a little pre planning and being prepared literally is the difference between life and death. and thank you to the guys who stopped to wish us well in the clemina parking lot after doing our walk of shame off the chopper lol.
Where in clemina did you drop in that you couldn't get out?
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Yeah it was beautiful day and we did some exploring sinxe visibility was excellent. once we went down, we knew going out the way we went in was going to be very tough so we thought we would side hill down and follow the creek since we knew it would come out on the trail or lead us to a spot to poke out into the switchback. well it got very steep and we managed to stick the side hill going down until it closed off and the creek disappeared. going forward would mean cutting down trees and facing the unknown. so we got turned around and started going back up hill. we got stuck many times and only went a few hundred yards in hours. eventually we ran out of daylight and energy. the next morning we had to hike down the creek about 3km to where the chopper could land safely to pick us up. after doing that hike and seeing what was below us, there was no way we were coming down there on a sled. all in all it was a lesson learned and a neat story to tell.I think you mean drainage, three nasty ones in keyhole! Good to hear you were able to make it out unscathed.
they are still in there. the weather will be our biggest concern getting them out right now.You left out the part about what happened with the sleds.
matches, Jerry can of gas, saw, shovel, flashlight, gps, phone, some kind of food and water were necessities. we rationed our food and drinks so we didn't eat much only had small portions to keep our energy up and only.drank when we felt we absolutely needed it. we also had things like a multi tool, tool.kits from the sleds, zip ties, pocket knife, screwdrivers that we didn't actually use but I wouldn't go without. also changed into dry gloves before we started building the fire. anything bigger than say 2" wouldnt burn so we literally were cutting branches and very small trees all night. we were layered up.pretty good because it's been cold.lately. if there's one thing that I wish we had was a.sat phone lol. other than that maybe a bivy sack or some kind of blanket in case one of got hurt. but basically common sense and doing what you need to survive is what got us through it.glad you guys are ok,and getting sleds recovered. with spending the night if you dont mind what equipment did you find to be nescassity and what do you wish you had.i pack what i think i would need but first hand experience may put a different item added to the list
thanks im covered with all that plus,only thing i think i might pack is a heavy pair of gloves for emergency only,i figure hands and feet might be the hardest to keep warm