ducktapeguy
Adventurer
It was NOT sensible in any meaning of the term. How about you take a look at that valley on Google Earth and follow the terrain down to Mormon Point?
I dunno, I can see how they came to their decision, and If I was in their shoes, I'm not sure I would have done anything differently. In hindsight everyone has 20/20, but I consider this an unfortunate accidents that led to the death rather than series of bad decisions. There are a lot of should've, would've, could've after the fact, but I don't really see gross errors on their part.
So their options were
1. Option 1 - Stay with the car. Probably a good suggestion for most cases but I wouldn't consider a hard and fast rule. In Oregon, James Kim stayed with the car for 9 days or so before starting to walk out. The Death ValleyGerman's minivan wasn't found until a month after they were gone. Maybe this couple stayed with the car for a day or two before deciding help wasn't coming? How long do you stay with limited water before trying to self rescue? If they were found dead in the car when the nearest road was only 5 miles away would that have been considered a smart decision?
2. Option 2 - Walk back out they way you came in. From what I've read, they found the Subaru 22 miles from the road. I'm assuming they're talking about Jubilee pass road, so that would put them very close to the end of Gold Valley road at the start of the canyon. At that point I assume they already had 2 flat tires. If so, that's 22 miles of hiking in the open desert to what is most likely a little travelled road. I can't remember if I've been on that road, but it's not one of the main roads in or out of Death Valley so I don't think it has much traffic. The nearest reliable location for help would be Shoshone, which would be closer to 33 miles walk. I'm pretty sure if they had been found dead on the road leading back East, everyone would be calling them stupid for not heading west to Badwater.
3. Option 3 - Drive out on flat tires. I had to drive on a flat tire for a couple miles on the highway and honestly with 2 flat tires, in the desert, it's probably faster to walk. If I knew there was no help coming and there was no other way out, maybe I would have done it, but it's almost guaranteed to destroy the car and transmission. At the time they decided to walk out, it wasn't a life and death decision, it sounds like they had food and water for a few days, so it wasn't to the point they needed to take drastic measures. If I thought there a fairly good chance of walking out or getting rescued I'm pretty sure I wouldn't have chosen this option, I doubt anyone else would either.
4. Option 4 - Walk out west. This is the option they took. I don't necessarily see it as a bad decision, it might have seemed like the best choice at the time. Again, I'm assuming they started at the end of Gold Valley road, which is about 4-5 miles from the heavily travelled Badwater road and probably the best chance of getting help in that area. The hikes from the west up to the foothills are fairly easy, I've taken my kids in Sidewinder canyon which is the canyon immediately south of Willow Canyon. So really the only unknown is the 2 miles in between the end of Gold Valley and the foothills. Between the option of hiking 4-5 miles in a shaded canyon vs 22-33 miles in the open desert, that's probably the route I would have taken. I would say their only mistake was dropping into the canyon, if they had stayed on the ridge they most likely would have been able to find a non-technical way down.
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