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  • This guy wasn't ready



    Missing Hiker Survives 6 Days Without Food, Water
    Oct. 1) -- Edward Rosenthal set out last week on what he thought would be a scenic day hike in an area of California's Joshua Tree National Park where he regularly goes walking. The 64-year-old real estate broker was celebrating a deal gone well -- the sale of a Los Angeles landmark, Clifton's Brookdale cafeteria.
    But Rosenthal somehow took a wrong turn off a trail he thought he knew well. On Thursday, six days later, search and rescue crews found him severely dehydrated -- but miraculously alive -- about 2,000 feet down a canyon, where he had wandered after getting lost near the park's southern boundaries.
    "He was conscious when the rescuers found him and was talking with them, but he does have some injuries and some exposure issues," park spokesman Joe Zarki told The Desert Sun newspaper of Palm Springs. A San Bernardino County sheriff's helicopter swooped in to ferry him to the High Desert Medical Center, where he was listed in intensive care, in stable condition and recovering from severe dehydration, The Associated Press reported.
    "It's really very miraculous," Rosenthal's wife, Nicole Kaplan, told the Los Angeles Times. "I didn't think that he'd be around."
    Kaplan said her husband is a poet who always has a pen with him but didn't have paper this time. So to keep himself sane while hoping rescuers would find him, he wrote on his hat -- telling his wife and daughter how he loved them, writing advice to business partners and instructions on what kind of funeral he wanted.
    "He realized he was lost and could not go any further, so he lied low and wrote on his hat," Kaplan told the AP.
    Asked what exactly he wrote, Kaplan told the Times "it's fairly personal. ... He basically wrote down everything he wanted us to know on that hat."
    His wrote his last journal entry on the hat on Wednesday, writing simply: "Still here."
    "We will probably frame the hat, along with the map the ranger gave us showing exactly where he was found," Kaplan told the AP.
    Southern California has been experiencing a severe heat wave, but cloud cover over the Palm Springs area kept the park 15 to 20 degrees cooler than normal. "So that helped him I'm sure," Zarki told National Parks Traveler magazine.
    Another 65-year-old man went missing in the same area of Joshua Tree National Park in June, but Georgia native William Ewasko was never found. The difference between the two cases -- between life and death -- was the soil that happened to absorb Rosenthal's footprints, Zarki said.
    "We had a good trail to follow coming off the loop trail where (Rosenthal) made a wrong turn," Zarki told National Parks Traveler. "The one in June, we never had a clear idea where that gentleman was."
    Knowledge is Power, Practiced Knowledge is Strength, Tested Knowledge is Confidence

  • #2
    According to the National Association for Search & Rescue about 80% of search subjects where "just" going on a day hike, so they don't think they need anything.
    Survival question. What do I need most, right now?

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    • #3
      Ok so those who know me know how I am and as my buddy calls me a doomsdayer (which I'm not, it's scientifically possible for zombies to exist LOL) this guy is on the other end of the spectrum classified as Duh.
      Think about it, hiking trails in a large National Park with no food/water, fire starter, daypack, just a pen?? That's not a tragedy it's the gene pool trying to cleanse itself. Don't let it be you, stay prepared with basics. I know I'm preaching to the choir right now but someone else new might look at this. Also they followed his footprints in and found him. First thing my dad said was how come he didn't follow his footprints back out? LOL, funny coming from a guy the same age as this one with a cataract in one and and can't see outta the other!
      EXE121 is dead on and a few years ago I visited the Grand Canyon and the ranger told me and my family the same thing after eyeballing me and my son's well stocked packs even though we were were not going in.
      Food-Water-Fire-Shelter = For the purpose of this article it could be a bottle of water, a lighter, a jacket and a bag of snacks, how easy is that?
      Knowledge is Power, Practiced Knowledge is Strength, Tested Knowledge is Confidence

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      • #4
        To add to Matt's comment, just tell someone responsible where you are going and when you expect to be back.
        Survival question. What do I need most, right now?

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