GPSGuided wrote:Wearing thongs on mountain walks
jjoz58 wrote:Taking your wife camping!
walkerchris77 wrote:Were you thinking if this intelligent life form
GPSGuided wrote:Now, are there non-stupid modes of death associated with bushwalking?
Strider wrote:Heart attack
jjoz58 wrote:Taking your wife camping!
Gadgetgeek wrote:Nuts, that sounds very much like the mindset of Jon "lofty" Wiseman. He seems to be a "been there done that" kind of guy, but he could not be more opposite than Bear. he is all about caution, planning, and making the smartest decisions you can. Life has risk, you are right, but even in the bush we can control and plan for very many of them. I would say probably even more than in an urban area.
Hallu wrote:Also, Australia is lucky to have properly built and maintained walking tracks. Even in mountainous Tasmania, it's pretty rare to have a narrow track where one wrong step = death, or you have ladders/ropes/chains. In the French Alps, it can be absolutely crazy (like this : http://www.tetras.org/Chartreuse/06_11_ ... e_Est.html or this : http://www.tetras.org/Chartreuse/07_07_Sangle_V.html ), and I think on 2/3 of the walks I do there is a short moment like that. And you won't find a single warning sign.
Allchin09 wrote:Hallu wrote:Also, Australia is lucky to have properly built and maintained walking tracks. Even in mountainous Tasmania, it's pretty rare to have a narrow track where one wrong step = death, or you have ladders/ropes/chains. In the French Alps, it can be absolutely crazy (like this : http://www.tetras.org/Chartreuse/06_11_ ... e_Est.html or this : http://www.tetras.org/Chartreuse/07_07_Sangle_V.html ), and I think on 2/3 of the walks I do there is a short moment like that. And you won't find a single warning sign.
Plenty of spots like that over hear - you have to go find them though! http://fatcanyoners.org/2013/05/04/ledging-mt-banks/
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