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NOLS MythCrushers Episode 3: Lightning
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Thanks for the link. Their advice to "not be at the wrong place at the wrong time" is sort of impossible as I've often set up on a mountain top at 4pm in fine weather with clear skies and by 3am a hellstorm arrives. Only one time was it so bad that I unstaked the tent and dragged it and everything in it down the mountain to a lower site. Not fun at night in the rain and flash.
The best technique I have found is to just tighten up my bunghole and wait to die.
BTW---here's another technique: (Esp good in the Southeast mountains with trees): Look at campsite trees for lightning score marks---a long vertical strip of bark and wood removed from a tree. This will indicate the place is prone to lightning strikes. -
Dogs are excellent judges of character, this fact goes a long way toward explaining why some people don't like being around them.
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Good video, I'm sending it to my kids.Lost in the right direction.
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last year, i think i was still in tennessee, and i was hiking through a t storm, with lightening flashes, some female section hikers started yelling "assume the lightening position." and they stopped and crouched. i just kept hiking. it wasnt on an exposed ridgeline, so i wasnt too concerned. i have had the hairs stand up on the back of my neck in the whites several times, once in the carters, and twice on franconia ridge.that latter had me a little nervous, just crouched by a rock for a while, then just kept hiking.its all good
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I've hiked a good bit in CT/MA at the end of summer when the college groups are out. One of the funniest things is that they make the kids assume lightning position for the entire time that they can hear thunder, even if it's in the middle of the night. Regardless of the fact that they are usually under the cover of dense forest and nowhere near the highest ground. I shared a very safe campsite with one group during a really bad storm one night in 2011 or 2012, I ended up chatting with one of the group leaders while making coffee the next morning and She was complaining about the rules that the schools made them follow. She told me that they had to force the kids into lightning position under their tarp for almost two hours even though she knew full well that the site we were in was at extremely low risk for lightning strike. Meanwhile I had slept through the whole thing...Dogs are excellent judges of character, this fact goes a long way toward explaining why some people don't like being around them.
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hikerboy wrote:
last year, i think i was still in tennessee, and i was hiking through a t storm, with lightening flashes, some female section hikers started yelling "assume the lightening position." and they stopped and crouched. i just kept hiking. it wasnt on an exposed ridgeline, so i wasnt too concerned. i have had the hairs stand up on the back of my neck in the whites several times, once in the carters, and twice on franconia ridge.that latter had me a little nervous, just crouched by a rock for a while, then just kept hiking.
Be wise enough to walk away from the nonsense around you! -
Tipi Walter wrote:
Thanks for the link. Their advice to "not be at the wrong place at the wrong time" is sort of impossible as I've often set up on a mountain top at 4pm in fine weather with clear skies and by 3am a hellstorm arrives. Only one time was it so bad that I unstaked the tent and dragged it and everything in it down the mountain to a lower site. Not fun at night in the rain and flash.
The best technique I have found is to just tighten up my bunghole and wait to die.
BTW---here's another technique: (Esp good in the Southeast mountains with trees): Look at campsite trees for lightning score marks---a long vertical strip of bark and wood removed from a tree. This will indicate the place is prone to lightning strikes.
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I thought lightening never strikes twice...
Kidding.Be wise enough to walk away from the nonsense around you! -
Lost in the right direction.
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wish they would do an episode about black bears. I can think of a boat load of bear myths everyone that every thinks are true but aren't .
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