Say A Prayer For The Lost Hikers

Discussion in 'Old Hippies' started by robspace2, Dec 12, 2006.

  1. robspace2

    robspace2 Banned

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    Right now about 50 miles from where I sit is Mt St. Helens-There are 3 lost hikers stuck and lost somewhere up on that mountain-The conditions are going to white out and they have been huddled in a snow cave for 3 days now-They did send a call by cell on Sunday but now the battery is dead and the search team is facing massive snowfall tonight and tommorro-As I sit here in my warm home so close it makes me very graterful to not be there-Ive skied Mt. Hood but never climb it-It has taken alot of lives in the past-One year a whole school class got trapped and died in the same way up there-We also just lost James Chin from CNET last week in Southern Oregon-He got lost' his family was found but he died-You must be prepared to take on Mother Nature-he was out of his element-A good family man and inventor is gone-As I go to sleep tonight I will say a pray for these three people to be found ALIVE-
     
  2. TARABELLE

    TARABELLE on the road less traveled

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    I had hoped they had found them by now. I am keeping them in my thoughts.
     
  3. robspace2

    robspace2 Banned

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    I guess 2 of them started down the mountain from the cave but have not been found and the third person is still in the cave-It is very snowy and 80 mph winds up near the top where they are-The good news is that they are all expeienced at this kind of conditions-but what a cold night-
     
  4. salmon4me

    salmon4me Senior Member

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    1 found dead. The other two bodies have not been found yet. Very sad for their families no doubt. The loss of human life is never trivial. BUT, they were climbimg a large mountain in winter-time. I have to say that to call it a tragedy seems...well....incorrect. Closer to an inevitability if you ask me. Not that all Mountain climbers will eventually die, just that they very well might. When they do die, I consider it an unfortunate incident or accident, but certainly not a tragedy. A tragedy is what happened to the guy in...what was it Oregon? Rob mentioned it, now THAT was a tragedy.
     
  5. erzebet1961

    erzebet1961 Senior Member

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    I have sent blessings to their families...and have lit candles and incense in their names.....and hope they are found verry soon.
     
  6. MollyThe Hippy

    MollyThe Hippy get high school

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    yes, there is sorrow in having our love ones move on but these folks certainly lived life to the hilt and they are to be commended for living life so fully and seeking out such exotic beauty and wonder of the winters' time
     
  7. salmon4me

    salmon4me Senior Member

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    HOOD RIVER, Ore. (Dec. 18) - Two climbers still missing on Mount Hood may have been swept to their deaths over a treacherous cliff by howling winds of more than 100 mph after they left their injured companion behind in a snow cave to get help. Sheriff Joe Wampler offered that scenario as rescuers went back up the mountain in helicopters Monday to retrieve the body of Kelly James from the snow cave and try again to find his two companions, who have been missing for a week. But the sheriff spoke grimly about the chances the pair were still alive: "We failed them. We literally failed them. But we tried our best, I know that." James' body was discovered over the weekend. He had an unspecified arm injury that apparently prevented him from continuing, Wampler said. Wampler said climbing equipment found on the mountain - including two slings and two aluminum anchors driven into the snow - led rescuers to believe that James' companions, Brian Hall and Jerry "Nikko" Cooke, had tried to secure themselves to the steep slope. That was the last sign of the two. Because of that, authorities said, it appears more and more likely that they were victims of an accident.
    If they did not find a place to take shelter, the sheriff warned, the climbers are long past the point of survival. But he added: "You can last a long time in a hole. We're going to keep looking for that hole." The spot on the 11,239-foot mountain where the two men vanished is commonly known as "the gullies," with a 60-degree slope and a treacherous 2,500-foot drop-off. Thirteen deaths over the past 40 years have been recorded in the same area. Teams were expected to continue searching for two more days, but weather forecasts may require them to take a break about Wednesday.
    James, a 48-year-old landscape architect from Dallas, made a cell phone call from the cave on Dec. 10, telling his family the party was in trouble. Wampler said it appears the three climbers succeeded in reaching the summit from the difficult north side and started go down the easier south side. They apparently tried to pass through a rock-and-ice formation known as the Pearly Gates, but did not find it.They built a snow cave, possibly because of bad weather, the sheriff said. He said all three probably spent the night of Dec. 8 there. The next day, he said, two of the men probably left the cave to go in search of help for James, who may have been injured. Then, the weather deteriorated even more. The two had to dig another snow cave on a steep slope for themselves, not far from the first one, and apparently used snow anchors to secure themselves to the mountain as bad weather raged around them, the sheriff said. "At some point they were standing there clipped into something, probably because it was so windy there. I mean this is a really steep, dangerous place on the mountain," Wampler said. Two ice axes, a glove, some rope and a piece of sleeping mat were found along with the slings and snow anchors. If they cannot find the climbers, rescue teams may start digging through as much as 10 feet of new snow that has fallen on the mountain, the sheriff said. "These guys left a trail better than most. But looking for three people on a very big mountain is a needle in a haystack," he said. The climbers may have suffered through weather similar to conditions on Mount Everest, the world's highest peak, said Jim Whittaker, who in 1963 became the first American to climb to the top of Everest. "It can turn into an Everest when you get those high winds and snow," said Whittaker, speaking from his home in Port Townsend, Wash. "You get knocked over by the wind. Your goggles fog up. You can't even travel." Most climbers attempt Mount Hood in May and June, when the weather is calmer. But Whittaker said he did not think it was reckless for the three men to climb Mount Hood during the winter. "They were climbers that knew what they were doing. They were just pushing themselves to their farthest frontiers. That's when people are at their best," he said. Frank James, brother of Kelly James, choked back tears when he said a ring found on his brother's body inside the snow cave had confirmed his identity. "This is a difficult day for all three families," James said. "I feel that I have two other brothers still on the mountain," he said.

    That from http://articles.news.aol.com/news/_...d/20061216144309990002?_mpc=news.10.1&cid=842
     
  8. Black Jim

    Black Jim Banned

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    Hope for the best for anyone in such a plight,yet if there was ever a place to
    pass on a Spirit to the next realm,


    a lofty ridge or peak would suit me fine.
     
  9. OnlyOne

    OnlyOne Banned

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    Hairdresserz 4 Jewzuz realm?
     
  10. HoneySuckleBlue

    HoneySuckleBlue Cosmic Artist

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    What a blessing to live ones life so close to God. I pray for the people that have lost the hikers.
     
  11. TARABELLE

    TARABELLE on the road less traveled

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    Hope is fading and now there is a new storm system moving it. So sad.
     
  12. sweetdreadlover

    sweetdreadlover TattooedRainbowGurl

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    yeah i live in oregon..the night they dissapperared all over oregon was howling winds...i live in eugene and we had 70 mph winds...very odd for the valley but i can imagine up on that mountain...one was found dead though..too damn sad...
     
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