Kenetrek Boots

How Complacency Kills

Ben Long

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 8, 2011
Messages
1,439
Location
Kalispell, MT
There is a mountain in northwestern Montana I have hunted for 20 years, have packed at least 20 head of big game off of it, for me and my hunting friends. Sunday at dark-30, I was back at the truck, tired, after hunting 5000 vertical feet, with no game to show for it. My radio crackled and it was my hunting partners, who had killed a buck on the ridgeline before dusk and now needed help dragging it down.

I was stoked for their success, so I put on my headlamp and charged up the mountain. I thought about grabbing my pack, but thought, hell, who wants the weight? I knew where they were, about 1200 feet above me on an open ridge. They had all the gear we needed. I've done this lots of times.
An while later, I found their headlamps glowing in the woods. They had split the deer in half. I took the front half, the guy who shot the buck took the hindquarters and our other friend took the rifles and packs.

The last pitch off the mountain is very steep and very thick. It also got foggy and started to rain. Hard. The headlamps were pretty much useless, because of the steam coming off me, the fog, and the rain. So I was pulling/falling downslope, humping half the buck over logs and through thickets, when I lost my orientation and started off down the wrong side of the canyon.

After a half hour of that, I realized I was going in the wrong direction. No sign of my hunting buddies' lights. I could barely hear them when I shouted to them. (Did I mention I am deaf in one ear, so I can't tell where they are coming from anyway.)

My point is, I suddenly found myself in a very dangerous spot. It was pouring rain, I was soaked through the skin, running on adrenaline, utterly and totally disoriented and nearly blind between the fog and the plant cover. Temperature was about 45F and dropping. My compass, PLB, fire kit, plastic garbage bag, whistle, two-way radio, were nicely packed in my kit, back a the truck. No bear spray (did I mention it is grizzly country?)

In fact, I keep that survival gear a separate belt pack so I can take it, without taking all my stuff. It was a rookie mistake to leave it, but not because I was a rookie, because I was complacent, too cocky.

I had a couple things going for me: I was wearing nothing but wool, so I was still fairly warm. I also knew the land well enough to know that the river was below me, and we were parked near a bridge.
So I decided to head straight downhill, until I hit the river bottom, then follow the river upstream to the bridge.

I left the deer half in an opening, where I thought I might (maybe) could find it again. Then I plunged downhill. I kept going until I hit the river. Record rainfall meant the river was roaring along bank full, so I had to scrap my idea of walking the riverbank up stream. The banks were full of wet alder and dogwood brush, with loads of deadfalls. All the side channels were full of water, so I was soon wading to my knees in cold runoff.

I didn't panic because (a) I have lots of practice being lost (b) there was no way in the world I would leave my son at home without me and (c) I knew if I kept the river to my left I would find the bridge and, thus, the truck. I knew if I was careful, I would not get hurt, and if I didn't get hurt, I would find my way out.

Which I did. Soaked. Cold. And to two hunting partners who looked very relieved they would not have to call my wife and tell her I was lost in the woods. The next day were were able to retrieve the half of the buck, which wasn't even that hard to find in the bright sunshine.

Lesson learned (again): Complacency kills. Never leave the rig without at least the basic gear for orientation and survival. What can go wrong? Plenty. And fast.
 
Ben, I don't know you, but I've admired your writing for a while. Now I admire your transparent honesty. Thanks for the post. It's a great reminder.
 
That should be an eye opener for all of us. Glad everything turned out alright.
 
Very good post. Had a similar thing happen to me last year. Packing an elk out of a new hunting area in the dark and in the rain as well. Relied on my two hunting partners for navigation one with a GPS the other with a phone (Lost my gps the year before). Long story short, tired, cold, wet and expecting to pop out on the road and the truck at any moment and one partner is pointing one direction and the other partner pointing the opposite direction. It was not a place I was comfortable being and have not been back in the woods without my own means of navigation since. Turned out we had slightly slid down hill past the truck, but still hit the road. A short 5 minute walk back up the road and we were out. But Talk about a helpless feeling.
 
I did something similar this year on my way out. I had 1/2 an elk on my back, It was cloudy and snowing, and pitch black out. I to got cocky and thought i knew just where i was going and was trudging full boar through the forest, i should soon meet up with a meadow that i would cross, follow the edge of the meadow and be back to the truck in a matter of a few hours. I soon came upon a set of tracks in the snow..... I had made a complete circle, they were my tracks. I was lost and didn't even know it yet.

Luckily, I had my full pack with which included a compass and GPS with way points, and got back on track in no time. I would have been in a world of hurt real fast had i not had those items with me though. I still have no idea how i got so turned around so fast in that forest.

It was a real eye opener for someone who has traveled that exact same route many many times over the years.
 
I have been hiking and backpacking since the early 80's and I was a pathfinder in the Army and served in several special assignment units and would always brag about how, I get lost in the city but you could NEVER get me lost in the woods!!

Until 2 years ago when I was tracking a doe in the pitch black pouring rain for several hours! When I finally looked up and headed to where I "THOUGHT" would take me out of the thick stuff, I realized I was 100% disoriented and LOST! Sick feeling and I am very lucky that this wasn't western states BIG woods and I was finally able to stumble my way out!

Glad you made it out and it's a good reminder, try and always be prepared !!
 
Great write up and wise advice for us. This is probably the best advice us seasoned hunters. Thanks for the humility in sharing with us.
 
Thanks for sharing. Good reminder for all of us.

Same could be said for "dropping" your pack to stalk an animal, those stalks can turn into long distances and dark thirty with a wounded animal. I've found myself wandering in circles to find a pack, and never drop one and leave it, ever...
 
Glad it ended well. This time. Safety gear in the outdoors is like a seatbelt in a vehicle. Use it and you are more likely to have a good result when risk arises. Leave it in camp or at the truck and can end badly when may have been preventable. Sounds like you had a small, light go bag so perhaps has too much stuff in it and you can lighten it a bit so will not hesitate to carry it each and every time.
 
Thanks for the share Ben. While you did leave your survival kit and other gear in the truck, you didn't totally leave your most important survival item.....your brain. Faced with the realization that you were in trouble, you worked out a solution to your problem, and made it out with little more than some worried friends and a good stress test of your woolies.

PS: does Outdoor Life still do the "This happened to me" stories??
 
Honestly, I think it was mostly tiredness and adrenaline that led to my bad decision to leave my "possibles" bag behind. Maybe some laziness. A dose of optimism. I remember the moment when I stepped away from the truck and thought "should I grab my pack? What should I take back up the hill?" And I heard the voice of a mentor saying "ALWAYS grab your pack." But I ignored that voice.
 
Thanks for the reminder Ben. My best friend left his pack in camp in the Scapegoat when he went out for a short little afternoon hunt. Hours later, as the snow was piling up, he came in very wet, cold, and relieved. In the fog and snow he dropped off the wrong drainage. Around dark, he realized he had NOTHING in the way of survival gear.

Scared the shit out of both of us. It was a nerve wracking wait in camp, knowing full well he didn't have his pack with him.
 

Forum statistics

Threads
113,671
Messages
2,029,132
Members
36,277
Latest member
rt3bulldogs
Back
Top