T4tomo
Legendary Member
Just been watching this on BBC breakfast
https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news...ng-two-shivering-nights-in-scottish-highlands
Seem to be a lot of focus on lucky it was mild and great job by mountain rescue, but how on earth if there are two of you, do you allow yourselves to become separated? Walk at the pace of the slowest, don't plough on regardless and leave you're mate behind, and if you are trailing you tell your mate to slow up a bit.
That's just basic isn't it?
The brilliant mountain rescue service should be for when someone is injured or a whole group gets caught out by weather / lost... Not the "I left my mate behind" call out
https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news...ng-two-shivering-nights-in-scottish-highlands
Seem to be a lot of focus on lucky it was mild and great job by mountain rescue, but how on earth if there are two of you, do you allow yourselves to become separated? Walk at the pace of the slowest, don't plough on regardless and leave you're mate behind, and if you are trailing you tell your mate to slow up a bit.
That's just basic isn't it?
The brilliant mountain rescue service should be for when someone is injured or a whole group gets caught out by weather / lost... Not the "I left my mate behind" call out