Exilatu (11 oct. 2012) disait:
OK mais l'exemple de stug c'était la Clusaz, c'est quand même pas l'endroit ou t'es obligé de sortir le Polaris à chenille tous les jours...
Certes
Personellement ce n'est d'ailleurs pas la neige en station ou en direction d'une station qui me fait plus peur mais la boue / gravier quand t'es a perpete de tout. La t'es vraiment comme un con. Eventuellement si tout va mal tu finis comme ce gars la qui fit l'erreur de prendre le mauvais tournant dans le blizzard dans l'Oregon (pas vraiment la Patagonie quoi..):
en.wikipedia.org
"Bear Camp Road came into the national spotlight in late 2006 when James Kim, his wife Kati, and their two daughters attempted to reach Gold Beach via this route. They missed an Interstate 5 exit to their intended route, Oregon Route 42, and decided to take Bear Camp Road instead. Late on the night of November 25, 2006, they missed signs warning of possible snow and continued up the mountain road. At the intersection of the BLM and FS sections of the road, they accidentally turned off of Bear Camp Road and eventually ended up lost 16 miles (26 km) down a side road before stopping for the night. A snowstorm trapped them at this location.
The family waited for rescue, surviving on limited resources. After spending six days waiting for rescue, James Kim left the car to seek help. He and his wife had attempted to locate their position using area road maps, and had estimated that the small town of Galice, Oregon was only four miles away. They were actually 33 miles (53 km) from the town by road. [1]
He left the car at 7:30 a.m. on Saturday, December 2 and backtracked down the road on which they were stranded. Approximately 11 miles (18 km) down the road, he turned down into the Big Windy Creek canyon. James Kim hiked through treacherous and dangerous terrain to reach the creek, and apparently was attempting to follow it to the Rogue River in an attempt to find help. [2]
On the following Monday, searchers found Kati Kim and her children near the car, but could not locate James Kim. Searchers traced James Kim's path down Big Windy Creek’s canyon in an effort to find him. His body was recovered in Big Windy Creek on Wednesday, December 6. According to medical examiners, James Kim died of hypothermia, but a precise time of death was not known.[1] He had walked approximately 16 miles (26 km) trying to find help."
inscrit le 15/09/10
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