ypochris wrote:
...the most remote, rugged, and inaccessible area in Hawai'i. The terrain is extremely rugged- unbelievably so to someone used to backcountry in the mainland U.S.- ..... It can take you days to go what looks like a mile on the map, if you manage to do it at all. The USGS maps are totally inaccurate, and unmapped gulches 30 feet wide and a hundred feet deep, hidden by vegetation, are a common hazard. Bottomless volcanic holes, 5-50 feet across and often hidden, are not uncommon. ...I could go on and on about how difficult the terrain is. Chris
Aloha Chris,
You said it very correctly... Those who travel the Rockies have no knowledge of the Hawai'ian jungle. Trained in the Rockies means, if one get disoriented, just follow a stream down hill...yet in Hawai'i that thought leads to death, as you are walking downhill over jungle vines SUDDENLY you walk over a cliff without anything UNDER you...over hundreds of feet of air beneath you!
I have traveled the two ranges of Oahu and they are just as bad. You gave a grave, yet great warning. I would not go solo anywhere in any of Hawai'i's mountains without experienced local climbers.
Oh, the pig hunter said "Zero" but described a "Val" and it turned out to be a P-47 with a red paint mark on it by the Hawaii Sea Frontier to ID the thang as a previously "found" plane! lol
Cheers,
David Aiken, a director: Pearl Harbor History Associates, Inc