← Back to context

Comment by khazhoux

7 months ago

But you didn't become worse at navigation. Sounds like you trusted a tool, and it failed you.

This is splitting hair, at the end his navigation skills (him + whatever tool he used) were NOK and could result in dangerous situations (been there so many times in the mountains, although it was mostly about "went too far in a bit wrong direction and don't want to backtrack that far, I am sure I will find a way to that already close point..." and 10 mins later scrambling on all 4 on some slippery wet rock with no room for error)

No - on both occasions it was the same scenario - descending from a peak in bad weather and picking the wrong ridge to descend - I was confident I "knew" which was the right ridge and with the app I use bearings for the right route are pretty difficult to distinguish - so completely my fault.

I'm now aware of that problem and haven't had that problem since but I was pretty shocked in retrospect that I confidently headed off in the wrong direction when the tool I was using was by any objective measure much better.

I agree with this:

"the key to navigating successfully is being able to read and understand a map and how it relates to your surroundings"

https://www.mountaineering.scot/safety-and-skills/essential-...