Originally Posted By: Bulldog34
Originally Posted By: SierraNevada
. . . many will just not put in the effort to learn the basic skills or carry a real map. They can get away with that on the Whitney main trail, but...


Amen. I once had a where-the-hell-am-I? discussion with a guy I ran across on-trail, and we were using his map for me to show him where we were standing and where he was going. He had his handy-dandy compass as well. What he didn't have was a clue what "declination" meant (this was in Washington state, where it means a helluva lot). I don't think he was ever completely convinced about the concept. Reading contour lines was not a particular strength of his either. By the time we parted I wondered why he even bothered carrying a map and compass - it was just so much dead weight in this case.

For Whitney in summer, though, it's follow the herd. Very straightforward trail, with only a small slabby section above Mirror Lake to potentially confuse people. I did this trail the first time solo, with raging AMS on the descent. I had a lot of concerns on my mind at the time, but following the trail wasn't one of them. This is a very difficult trail to go off track for any significant distance.



I had a similar conversation on a Whitney Trip. I was at the junction of the Lower Rock Creek Ranger Station and the PCT. There was a guy standing on the PCT with a handy dandy Tom Harrison Cartography map in his hand looking very confused. He asked me where is the PCT, I told him he was standing on it. He asked again, this time, with a really added. I then when to his map and showed him exactly where he was. To this day, I don't think he believed me.

For some reason, whenever I encounter those suffering geographic ambiguity, they all seem to be carrying the colorfully shaded Tom Harrison Cartography maps.