3 Hikers who VANISHED randomly... but were somehow found YEARS later?

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3 disturbing stories of hikers who vanished from the wilderness, only to be found YEARS later...
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Пікірлер: 1 500

  • @49thParallelwildernessrescue
    @49thParallelwildernessrescueАй бұрын

    This is Bud Carr, thanks for the kind words. Rachel passed away from exposure to the elements. Very accurate representation of her case and facts surrounding it. If you have any questions, feel free to reach out to me.

  • @jenniferholden9397

    @jenniferholden9397

    Ай бұрын

    Thank goodness there are people like you out there, it takes guts to do what you do but don’t worry, you’ll never have to rescue me, I’m scared stiff of heights, I mean terrified, my legs and brain go to jelly, even stairs without a hand rail are beyond me. Have fun and be happy doing what you love. ❤

  • @sumtingwong4997

    @sumtingwong4997

    Ай бұрын

    Thanks for what you do sir.

  • @michaelblaes9847

    @michaelblaes9847

    Ай бұрын

    Keep it up. If your competent no one can tell you not to search and try to help because your not a "recognized" group.

  • @GreenTea3699

    @GreenTea3699

    Ай бұрын

    Hi Bud. I'm sure your efforts brought her friends and family closure. That's a wonderful gift to give. Thank you for all your hard work. ❤

  • @jojeanajaxon

    @jojeanajaxon

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@jenniferholden9397 Me Too!! Legs literally turn to noodles. I can't even hold myself up! It's crazy! Glad I'm not alone lol.

  • @scottyperkins8948
    @scottyperkins8948Ай бұрын

    On behalf of Idaho Mountain Search and Rescue, thank you very much for the shout-out and the resulting donations! We appreciate it very much!

  • @laurieb3703

    @laurieb3703

    Ай бұрын

    Thank you for all you guys do!!

  • @Rckcasa4118

    @Rckcasa4118

    Ай бұрын

    Thank you for all your work! Donating! We need you guys ❤

  • @Fyrpylit

    @Fyrpylit

    22 күн бұрын

    Former SVFD here. God Bless you

  • @rachelgriggs2956

    @rachelgriggs2956

    4 күн бұрын

    I don't personally know anyone who has needed assistance from any rescue group during a hike. But I wanted to thank all the volunteers who give their time to help others. You truly are the unsung heroes. 💚💚💚

  • @Katinahat293

    @Katinahat293

    3 күн бұрын

    God bless! Thanks for what yall do

  • @YudronWangmo
    @YudronWangmoАй бұрын

    I'm 65. It's a funny age, you feel like your old self inside, and you're still walking and doing chores normally. It's easy to forget that your endurance, flexibility. strength, balance, and balance, etc have declined. I recently had to sit myself down and have "the talk" with myself. No more solo hikes.

  • @rachellucas242

    @rachellucas242

    Ай бұрын

    Great memories though ❤

  • @HikingwithGus

    @HikingwithGus

    Ай бұрын

    I'm 66 and hike with my dog who will be 10 next month ( 60in dog years) we both think we can do things and then when we do our bodies ask "What the "F" were you thinking?" But, if I'm gonna die, I'd rather it be in the back country rather than sitting in a chair eating cupcakes....

  • @janemiettinen5176

    @janemiettinen5176

    Ай бұрын

    I recently asked my 92yo grandma how old she feels, she said “Oh, about 30 inside, but around million outside”.. She still travelled by herself couple years ago and lived independently until few months ago. Im nearing my 50s and Im kinda amazed Ive made it this far :)

  • @nvtruant5994

    @nvtruant5994

    Ай бұрын

    I’m 65, and do daily wilderness hikes with my dog and several solo overnight backpack trips. I have a mini InReach and use it. I have hiked all my life and what I might be lacking in physicality due to aging, I’ve gained in experience. The younger version of me took way more risks that could have had serious consequences. So, just because you’re getting older doesn’t mean that you’re at increased risk.

  • @ulflyng4072

    @ulflyng4072

    Ай бұрын

    @@janemiettinen5176 Asked my grandmother the same. She said "19 inside" and laughed. Guess it's something we all get to experience.....if lucky

  • @aproxamillionwasps474
    @aproxamillionwasps47425 күн бұрын

    My dad was a volunteer SAR president for years, I used to be the “lost hiker” in training exercises and they would carry me off the mountain. There were lots of late night phone calls where they would have to go out and find someone. I was always so proud of him for that.

  • @MrSirlulzalot

    @MrSirlulzalot

    3 күн бұрын

  • @Bullvengeance666

    @Bullvengeance666

    8 сағат бұрын

    Don't lie.

  • @user-cw8hw8vo7g
    @user-cw8hw8vo7gАй бұрын

    Hi Kyle I'm a Brit who has hiked in a lot of places around the world. A huge difference between Europe and North America is that the backcountry areas in Europe are nowhere near as large and remote as you have and you are much more likely to come across, or be seen by, other hikers (unless you fall down a crevasse or something), so less likely to just disappear for years. I once trekked up Wolverine Pass outside Golden BC and in nine hours didn't see a soul. Very unlikely that would happen in Europe. Enjoy the trip!

  • @je10022

    @je10022

    Ай бұрын

    I live here in BC. What you say is accurate.

  • @zlopseto3516

    @zlopseto3516

    Ай бұрын

    I live in Europe, Croatia, right under mountain Biokovo. Every summer someone get lost, missin, found dead.... Usually people from Poland and Czech but they are not the only one. I hike on biokovo almost every week, we have a second highest peak in country, 1762m and believe me i almost never meet another hiker.

  • @HighPriestess44

    @HighPriestess44

    28 күн бұрын

    I'm a brit aswel and can tell you that you are wrong.

  • @JonasAlexanderson

    @JonasAlexanderson

    26 күн бұрын

    Well, living in Sweden you can go for days without seeing anyone. Even in some areas in the south.

  • @Alejojojo6

    @Alejojojo6

    23 күн бұрын

    Depends where in Europe. Isnt the same crowded UK than Russia, Lapland or Inland Spain or France.

  • @sheraeguerrero
    @sheraeguerrero28 күн бұрын

    Thank you for mentioning Rachel. She was my friend in high school. I miss her alot and think of her always. She was such a kind soul, and she would help anyone who needed it. Rachel was a person who had a contagious smile and laugh. She would always make me laugh when we talked. I met Rachel in 9th grade, we had intro to drama together so we would have to be on stage pretending to be trees or animals. It was funny then our junior year we had stage craft together so we would get the theater stage ready for shows me, her, and 3 more students. That class was fun because we were always able to play with the props. After high school me n rachel lost touch but I always considered her a friend, and always will. I still talk about her even now, and I know that if she was here she would still be the free spirit she always was, with her red hair, and amazing smile..that is how I remember her. I still can’t believe she’s gone. 😥 but I think of her as a guardian angel to her friends and family. I hope she is resting in peace.

  • @4potslite169
    @4potslite169Ай бұрын

    As soon as you said Oct, I thought NOPE! I’ve been in an ice/snowstorm with 70mph winds at that elevation, (in a shelter and carrying extra emergency food,) in AUGUST! Never ever underestimate mountains. Motorcyclists have a mantra…dress for the fall, not the ride.

  • @chakagomez8129

    @chakagomez8129

    Ай бұрын

    we got snowed on in yosemite one fourth of july weekend. luckily we were pretty much prepared for anything

  • @claireangel9595

    @claireangel9595

    Ай бұрын

    Close..we say "Dress for the SLIDE, not the Ride."

  • @brendatomlinson

    @brendatomlinson

    29 күн бұрын

    I’m not even a climber and that sent off alarm bells in my head

  • @janiceconnett3192
    @janiceconnett3192Ай бұрын

    I'm from Albuquerque NM. I was at Zermatt Switzerland and on way to Matterhorn's viewing area by tram in 1958 when a body floated down the river there, released from the snowmelt off the glacier area. It was of a climber that had perished decades beforehand (old climbing gear/clothes).

  • @littlebear274
    @littlebear274Ай бұрын

    The health of a 66 year old varies WILDLY. Some are very much declining, others are physically more like someone in their 40s. My great-grandmother lived until 103, my father is currently closing in on 80 and he's still doing quite adventurous things - he just came back from a photography trip in Norway and has another one planned in February for the Serengeti.

  • @sarasmr4278

    @sarasmr4278

    Ай бұрын

    My 80yo neighbor is outside mowing his lawn right now and I have no doubt he could do a day hike. And there's people in their 70s at the climbing gym who are stronger and fitter than I am in my 40s. There's also plenty of 35yos who couldn't manage a day hike. It's not fair to just look at age. It DOES put him at higher risk and that's totally fair to point out. Some of us are willing to accept that risk to be out there. Whatever happened was fast enough he couldn't call for help. If that was medical, he wasn't going to make it no matter where he was. If it was an accident I'm glad he went fast.

  • @sarasmr4278

    @sarasmr4278

    Ай бұрын

    p.s. I asked if his fancy riding mower was broken down and he said no he just thought he'd come out and get his exercise. Use it or lose it!

  • @janefreeman995

    @janefreeman995

    Ай бұрын

    Alex Honnolds mom at 70 climbed El Cap with him ...and of course ...with ropes ;)

  • @Sniperboy5551

    @Sniperboy5551

    Ай бұрын

    Yeah, I’d guess something like a stroke or heart attack is most likely in Jack Thomas’s case. Some people just get unlucky.

  • @georgemartin1498

    @georgemartin1498

    Ай бұрын

    I’m closing in on age 75. I traversed 404,000 vertical feet in 2023 and am on track for a 10% increase in 2024. I am one of the lucky ones I admit and certainly am thankful for. But I know that as we all age the ticking time bomb that is our body can go off at any time 😉. Quite possibly Thomas’s fate.

  • @annfrank7901
    @annfrank790127 күн бұрын

    Thanks for the volunteer SAR team shout out! We are everywhere :) pay our own way and fundraise for our gear, dogs, trainings, etc.

  • @denlaf
    @denlafАй бұрын

    The most incredible part of this story is that a man who was a part of Bud’s team is named Kevin Dares. Kevin’s girlfriend, Samantha Sayers, went missing 3 years before on Mt Vesper, also in the North Cascades. She has not yet been found. He understood deeply the pain of Rachel’s family. You are amazing and selfless, Kevin!

  • @teresacorrigan3076

    @teresacorrigan3076

    Ай бұрын

    30:34 thanks for the good advice. I appreciate it. 🇨🇦🍁🙂

  • @randlecarr3257

    @randlecarr3257

    Ай бұрын

    Very familiar with this as I live nearby. Peace.

  • @TheDrakanMaster124
    @TheDrakanMaster124Ай бұрын

    You should do some videos on people who were missing for a long time but were found alive

  • @edwardzignot2681

    @edwardzignot2681

    Ай бұрын

    It'd all be stories from my neck of the woods. I live in Humboldt and that happens all the time. People come up here to disappear, their families freak out thinking they were killed by some weird pot kingpin with their own lil kingdom in the mountains, then they turn up like 5 years later after they get sick of trimming and living in someone's shed. The death to weird pot warlords thing only happens once in awhile!

  • @tatata1543

    @tatata1543

    Ай бұрын

    Like Elivis.

  • @i.ehrenfest349

    @i.ehrenfest349

    Ай бұрын

    @@edwardzignot2681trimming?

  • @CyborgMaMa

    @CyborgMaMa

    Ай бұрын

    @@i.ehrenfest349do you know Humbolt? 💨💨💚😶‍🌫️😂😘

  • @i.ehrenfest349

    @i.ehrenfest349

    Ай бұрын

    @@CyborgMaMa nope

  • @douglaslangella7782
    @douglaslangella7782Ай бұрын

    I am 66 years old and I am an active mountain biker, day hiker and car camper. I am smart about what I do and try not to put myself in excess peril . I used to backpack when I was younger, but I don’t know anyone interested in going anymore. I really enjoy your hiking videos especially the Foothills trail as I live in South Carolina. I liked the videos with you and Flossy. They remind me of all the stupid shit I did when I was younger. 😂 Doug

  • @jackspring7709
    @jackspring7709Ай бұрын

    Watching from the UK. I haven't been to Switzerland but I did live in Germany, Bavaria and its almost impossible to describe the dreamlike, fairy tale landscapes over there, in summer and winter. I remember once jumping on the wrong train and ending up in the foothills of the Alps in a small quaint little station that must have been at least a hundred years old. It was a frosty but sunny morning and the view was unforgettable.

  • @limeallens6160

    @limeallens6160

    Ай бұрын

    Amazing

  • @Faristol7

    @Faristol7

    Ай бұрын

    Are you a writer?

  • @jackspring7709

    @jackspring7709

    Ай бұрын

    @@Faristol7 Hello. Not really: I write a little bit as a hobby :)

  • @Faristol7

    @Faristol7

    18 сағат бұрын

    @@jackspring7709 Me too! I love writing long, detailed descriptions of scenes or situations!!

  • @mollymelena6104
    @mollymelena6104Ай бұрын

    I thought this video was about people who disappeared but found years later ALIVE :(

  • @Rustyspoonssssss

    @Rustyspoonssssss

    29 күн бұрын

    😂😂me too

  • @ResinAlchemist2024

    @ResinAlchemist2024

    20 күн бұрын

    Nope. Wrong channel for that.

  • @sazonada

    @sazonada

    16 күн бұрын

    Hey, yeah!

  • @gearhead8989

    @gearhead8989

    14 күн бұрын

    Same

  • @arleneportsmouth1263

    @arleneportsmouth1263

    13 күн бұрын

    I think we are all aware that the title of the videos are only for clickbait and the titles actually don't have anything to do with the video period. I'm pretty certain that the person who gave the title to this video had no idea what it was about.

  • @brittanywertz252
    @brittanywertz252Ай бұрын

    I spent a week with Rachel in Northern Ireland and she was one of the sweetest people 🥺

  • @sumtingwong4997

    @sumtingwong4997

    Ай бұрын

    sorry you lost your friend

  • @sheraeguerrero

    @sheraeguerrero

    28 күн бұрын

    I was a friend of Rachel’s since high school. She was one of the nicest sweetest people I have ever met. She had such a pure heart. I miss her always.

  • @aaronsause6573
    @aaronsause6573Ай бұрын

    So, I was the injuree of an attempted murder/carjacking, with a nice smashed up leg n stuff, and as much as i used to love hiking and the outdoors, I don't get out much any more...regardless, i still like watching your stories and enthusiasm for the outdoors...i think you will get to a million for sure!!!

  • @concettaworkman5895

    @concettaworkman5895

    Ай бұрын

    You poor dear.

  • @retriever19golden55

    @retriever19golden55

    Ай бұрын

    Damn! I'm so sorry that happened to you! Hang in there, dear!

  • @laurenrowell9251

    @laurenrowell9251

    Ай бұрын

    Oh, that's terrible! Did the police find the person who did this to you? How are you doing now - can you walk without assistance?

  • @aaronsause6573

    @aaronsause6573

    27 күн бұрын

    @laurenrowell9251 unfortunately no, when I came back to consciousness in the hospital, shortly after a police officer came into the room and started asking me questions about it, which i didn't remember too much of, then cant remember exactly how he said it, but he asked why did i set my car on fire and burn it? Lolol...apparently they found it somewheres burnt up, so ya, no evidence, and I don't remember enough to even know where to begin looking for this person...but ya, I was like, how the heck did I run over myself, drag myself several hundred feet, smashing my body and road rash everywhere, then somehow light my car up? Even if I had full coverage and you think I did some insurance scam, on a several years old minivan! Like Im gona mess my whole life up for some pocket change 🤣 silly cops...i guess they gotta do their due diligance...but even if they found that person, I would forgive them, it doesn't hurt anyone bit yourself when you hold grudges...

  • @davidcollin1436

    @davidcollin1436

    17 күн бұрын

    Blaming the victim is the method of an imbecileCop

  • @luciemarinov129
    @luciemarinov129Ай бұрын

    Really appreciate your videos, from California! Non hiker, 78 , but still riding my horse!

  • @silverkiss37

    @silverkiss37

    Ай бұрын

    Riding horses is one of the hardest things to give up!! It's so amazing and peaceful and exhilarating and fun! Being one with your horse... Good for you. 💜

  • @LaughingblueSu

    @LaughingblueSu

    Ай бұрын

    I do dream of selling everything I own, and buying a 🐎 horse.

  • @teresaoconnell4790

    @teresaoconnell4790

    Ай бұрын

    Get off that darned horse. LOL

  • @silverkiss37

    @silverkiss37

    Ай бұрын

    @@teresaoconnell4790 You'd have to pry him off with a crowbar. 😉😉😄

  • @silverkiss37

    @silverkiss37

    Ай бұрын

    @@LaughingblueSu Me too, but I don't own enough. 😂

  • @shakyarcher
    @shakyarcherАй бұрын

    An emergency shelter is one of the 10 Essentials, which should even be carried on day hikes.

  • @TDubya811

    @TDubya811

    Ай бұрын

    Plus warm clothing, thermos of hot tea and a good book.

  • @shakyarcher

    @shakyarcher

    Ай бұрын

    @@TDubya811 not exaxtly...

  • @JW-mb6tq

    @JW-mb6tq

    Ай бұрын

    I had a day hike turn overnight because of weather. We all carried the ten essentials. We had a great time even if we were late.

  • @JonasReichert1992

    @JonasReichert1992

    Ай бұрын

    @@shakyarcherwhy not- you can make a fire with a few sheets of Paper!

  • @brianmaguire6814

    @brianmaguire6814

    Ай бұрын

    A mylar blanket and a lighter works pretty good too. 😆

  • @abeeral-qattan5997
    @abeeral-qattan5997Ай бұрын

    Thank you Kyle- I’m addicted to your chanel and story telling .I’m a 53 year old mother and ultra trail runner from Kuwait, where you can only find concrete and desert, nowhere to hike, but I do camp and sleep in the desert through our short winter every year. However, I’ve been fortunate enough to have been able to travel around the world and hike/run/camp in different trails partially for leisure and mostly as part of my race training . I’ve been to the mountains of Taiwan, Oman, Turkey, I ran The Alps in Italy, Swiss, France, as part of my UTMB race , and I also hiked in the Rockies in Colorado and in the AT Virginia . Planning to visit Vancouver this year . Saving money for my hiking /running and camping around the world is what I do when I’m in flat pancake Kuwait 😅 thank you and never stop your amazing content ❤

  • @libbybee89
    @libbybee89Ай бұрын

    Kyle always reminds you that these aren't just stories, but real life situations that we can & should learn from!

  • @sovereignbrehon
    @sovereignbrehonАй бұрын

    Your advice about the tent/bivy gear on a short, steep solo overnight to a cabin in late October is 100% on point. It's not overkill or armchair quarterbacking. Doing a literal "post-mortem" analysis on these cases is a critical component in comprehensive risk management. You tell these stories with so much heartfelt concern, it shouldn't stand out as much as it does. But it does. Let's hope that approach goes viral. It's time for the internet to grow up and make itself useful!

  • @sarasmr4278

    @sarasmr4278

    Ай бұрын

    It reminds me a little of the accident reports for airplanes or OSHA. Let's learn what we need to change to be safer going forwards. But also, you can do everything right and nature will kill you anyway if she wants to, and we should all remember that while we're out there so we can make the best decisions.

  • @markgunther2502

    @markgunther2502

    Ай бұрын

    Silly. None of us tune in to get "tips" or be nannyed on hiking. This is all just curiousity on people dying. There are other channels I would go to if I wanted to be preached to. No one is going to listen to this kid's advice anyway. Also it really is armchair quarterbacking. No one can plan for every contingency, and 99.9999% of the people that hike have no major problems. So should we all carry around 200 pounds of equipment just in case that 0.0001% occurance were to arise? Let's not forget that carrying additional weight is also a problem that can cause death/falling/getting lost etc. It's a lot easier to slip and fall with extra weight, especially since the weight is carried on the upper body making one more top heavy. More likely to become exhausted, have a heart attack, suffer altitude sickness, etc with that extra weight. Potentially more likely to get lost from being more weary and less attentive from being bogged down with the weight. More likely to slip in a stream, drown, etc with that extra weight. etc etc.

  • @billsmith3250

    @billsmith3250

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@markgunther2502Yeah, not silly. Not preaching. Definitely not armchair quarterbacking. Glad to see the hypocrisy when you speculate on what might have happened. Some of that was truly ridiculous. That said, it could have been Bigfoot. Did you think about that?

  • @wandering_butnotlost

    @wandering_butnotlost

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@markgunther2502 I tune in for tips. I think learning from other mistakes is a good way to hopefully not make the same mistake myself.

  • @wandering_butnotlost

    @wandering_butnotlost

    Ай бұрын

    ​@markgunther2502 also you have 44 comments on this channel complaining about "this kid"... you okay bro? You seem to be fragile

  • @coreverwirrt
    @coreverwirrtАй бұрын

    This is very important. Never let the summit fever get to you. Even if the summit is already visible and seems close enough to touch, if for some reason you have doubts and a bad feeling or are totally exhausted, then turn around! You only have one life, but you can try again. I tried three times on Kangchenjunga, unfortunately I had to turn back three times. In the end, I and two others succeeded the following year. I think if I hadn't turned back, I would have stayed on the mountain.

  • @jeremeyre6599

    @jeremeyre6599

    14 күн бұрын

    Agreed. I don't know who originally said it, but I've adopted it as my hiking mantra and repeat it every time I head out solo or with my kids: "Getting to the summit is optional, getting safely back down is not. If we have to sacrifice one for the other, we'll sacrifice the summit every time."

  • @kstein4628
    @kstein4628Ай бұрын

    I’m guessing the first guy either had a heart attack or a stroke- had to be something so incapacitating that he couldn’t push a button- it could have just as easily killed him in his living room if that’s what happened

  • @darthlaurel

    @darthlaurel

    Ай бұрын

    True but the whole pants/underwear thing is bizarre.

  • @dsmith5199

    @dsmith5199

    Ай бұрын

    Bigfoot

  • @zeva66

    @zeva66

    Ай бұрын

    @@darthlaurel May be he was ...well, you know going to toilet out there /sorry i'm not native english no idea how to say it without saying something rude! ) and then suddenly he felt bad, may be he felt a big heat, his blood pressure was not okay, went high, he wanted to get the satelite thing to send a signal but suddenly had no idea where it was and took down his clothes to look in his pocket and then he went forward and died suddenly...a stroke, a heart attack, something that confuses him first before it went fatal.

  • @dsmith5199

    @dsmith5199

    Ай бұрын

    @@zeva66 the thing is, his remains were not found near the pants and underwear. Now maybe they could've gotten dragged off or blown by the wind, but what about the one boot, and where was the other boot? It's all pretty sketchy. I still say Bigfoot

  • @kstein4628

    @kstein4628

    Ай бұрын

    Animals could have pulled off the clothes- bears are especially dexterous and would have no problem pulling the pants off to get at the meat- other scenario is he was unknowingly suffering from hypothermia- which would explain why he didn’t call for help, as it can cause delusions and extreme confusion. Also in the end stages of hyperthermia, your body tells your brain you are actually hot, and a lot of people who die from exposure are found naked- sometimes even with blankets and sleeping bags nearby

  • @HikingwithGus
    @HikingwithGusАй бұрын

    I live just a few miles from where Rachael was lost and then found. She was found in a tree well in her bag. The snow that time of year up here is what we call Cascade concrete, it's wet and heavy. The storm lasted for days when she was lost would severe and a GPS unit would not have worked due to the heavy snow and weather conditions. We have had a bunch of missing people in this area. Some found some not. Check into Patricia "Patti" Krieger, who was lost on Sauk Mtn. This is a very popular hike, but she is still missing. Her dog showed up many miles from where she was last seen. BTW i am 66 years old and a solo all the time, I have been hiking and backpacking since I was 12. And yes, you never know when your number is up no matter how careful you are. ;)

  • @HikingwithGus

    @HikingwithGus

    Ай бұрын

    @ImaRandomFemale she was found next to a tree in her sleeping bag. Speculation is she hunkered down under the tree. If I remember correctly, the snow was not deep enough at the time to produce tree wells. It was a nasty storm that she was in.

  • @randlecarr3257

    @randlecarr3257

    Ай бұрын

    I live nearby. High strangeness.

  • @get_some2083
    @get_some2083Ай бұрын

    Hey Kyle, idahoan here, hadn't heard of this story. Thank you for the donation to the rescue organization and all the others you donate to.

  • @Jill-K
    @Jill-KАй бұрын

    I like the way you don't sensationalise and protect identities. Its very respectful. 👏👏

  • @Tru_G.R.I.T
    @Tru_G.R.I.TАй бұрын

    I was thinking of the John Denver song "I guess he'd rather be in Colorado" if it's my time to go, I'd rather go out surrounded by natural wonder than in bed.

  • @automnejoy5308

    @automnejoy5308

    Ай бұрын

    It's easy to say that if you've never come close to freezing or starving to death. People that go missing in the wilderness do not have beautiful deaths. The scenery rather loses its luster when it is bearing down on you as a menacing maze, killing you. Whether it's fast or slow, it's a terrifying, desperate, agonizing nightmare.

  • @arnehusby1420
    @arnehusby1420Ай бұрын

    You are welcome to Norway. We have endless nature that is truly fantastic. We have mountains, forests and fjords. All Norwegians love to be out in nature and Norway is a safe country to travel to. Now the biggest danger is avalanches if you hike in the North of Norway. There are few dangerous animals too.

  • @bold810

    @bold810

    Ай бұрын

    There are some dangerous Finnish dudes out there; ask the Hungry Ghosts of the Karelian Peninsula. 🎉

  • @michaelkaiser85

    @michaelkaiser85

    Ай бұрын

    Norway is somewhere I would love to visit and some of the nicest people in the world

  • @joyful_tanya

    @joyful_tanya

    Ай бұрын

    I'm of Norwegian descent and it's always been a place I want to visit!

  • @joyful_tanya

    @joyful_tanya

    Ай бұрын

    I'm of Norwegian descent and it's always been a place I want to visit!

  • @zannadunstrand6289

    @zannadunstrand6289

    Ай бұрын

    As a Swede I agree. Norways nature is FANTASTIC to hike in! Swedens northern parts are beautiful too but norway is something else!

  • @Pipsqwak
    @PipsqwakАй бұрын

    The reason so many long-missing people are being found in the Alps is because the glaciers are melting rapidly, revealing the bodies. Just as with Ötzi, the famous "ice Man" who was revealed by melting glacial ice high in the Alps after having been buried for over 5,000 years.

  • @soph4381

    @soph4381

    Ай бұрын

    The only benefits to the receding glaciers.

  • @trucker-d4161

    @trucker-d4161

    Ай бұрын

    @@soph4381I guess we could always go back to the ice age🤷‍♂️

  • @drunkvegangal8089

    @drunkvegangal8089

    Ай бұрын

    @@soph4381 No. The Archeological record is being serious injected with tons of valuable information from all kinds of flora and fauna melting out at the moment. A lot of this is human history but tons of it is other types of history; from viruses and bacteria to animal and human technology/tool remains. Human, Neanderthal and other hominin artifacts re-surface on a daily basis and all we need to preserve, study, and excavate this material is more funding and skilled workers.

  • @robertwinn4458

    @robertwinn4458

    Ай бұрын

    This is relevant to any of this, how?

  • @drunkvegangal8089

    @drunkvegangal8089

    Ай бұрын

    @@robertwinn4458 Of zero interest to anyone with a hatred or aversion towards science, archeology, anthropology,. modern humanity, ancient flora and fauna, and the the Anthropocene. So, you I guess but billions of others show great interest and curiosity about what the receding glaciers are uncovering. This is a treasure-trove of fascinating discoveries...but not for you. Pathetic.

  • @alauram.6416
    @alauram.6416Ай бұрын

    I am someone who not only lives in southern idaho but also is a pretty regular solo hiker and nature enjoying person. Idaho has more hiker and hunter disappearances in the backwoods than most are aware of as the news coverage usually doesnt go much farther than local news.. I as a solo hiker here always take all the necessary gear and then some as Idaho has unpredictable weather wildly varying conditions on trails and it is rather easy to get lost off trail or even at times on trail as many are backcountry or rarely maintained not to mention the wildlife dangers like mountian lions, bears, wolves,, ect (depending on area of idaho) It is so easy to become a victim of the beautiful rugged woods of Idaho

  • @WeirdSnakeGal
    @WeirdSnakeGalАй бұрын

    Hey I'm from Switzerland and "there was not much info" is the standard here. We never get any details about anything and when something horrible happens there might be a few articles about them but they're quickly pushed under the rug. Even as a local I don't know half the stories that happen here. My theory is that Switzerland tries to hide anything negative because they have a "reputation" to uphold. However, something happened a couple of month ago and I've been thinking about sending you an email about it.

  • @margaritaisabelcabrera6491

    @margaritaisabelcabrera6491

    Ай бұрын

    I know Switzerland and agree with you

  • @florasoft5016

    @florasoft5016

    Ай бұрын

    I dare say it has nothing to do with "upholding a reputation", I'd call it decency and respect for the victim and family. Not everybody wants their misery to be dragged all over the internet.

  • @raybod1775

    @raybod1775

    Ай бұрын

    True at tourist places everywhere, locals don’t want negative news coming out.

  • @brendatomlinson

    @brendatomlinson

    29 күн бұрын

    @@raybod1775you mean like all the US National Park Service disappearances that David Paulides’ Missing 411 shows?

  • @joanfry5440

    @joanfry5440

    16 күн бұрын

    touring the mountains by car i stopped at a tiny gas station to fill up, turned around just in time to see an avalanche cascading from above. nothing damaged, nobody hurt, but owner of station said , oh that happens a couple of times a week”. so beware

  • @lone6718
    @lone6718Ай бұрын

    There some sudden health issues that can pop up out of nowhere. Aneurysms and strokes are a couple, sometimes there are clear signs that these could happen, but there have been people of all ages that get hit with these out of the blue. Yes, he was out hiking in his 60’s, hopefully it was sudden and painless. And he was clearing doing something he loved to do.

  • @zarasbazaar

    @zarasbazaar

    Ай бұрын

    I was hiking out on the gravel bar of a river in Alaska, fortunately near town, when I experienced nausea and chest pains. On my way back to the car it suddenly occurred to me that I might be having a heart attack. Fortunately (sort of) it was a gallbladder attack and I made it back. A couple of years later I was hiking in some isolated parts of New Mexico. A month after flying home my gallbladder put me in the hospital for two days with emergency surgery. It's stayed with me how differently both of those hikes could have gone.

  • @mandalorianmama
    @mandalorianmamaАй бұрын

    The fact that private citizens trying to solve missing persons cases is controversial is so sad to me! Law enforcement has limited time and resources for these long term cases, which is understandable. They have to focus on the most urgent cases. I just don't see why it would be bad for people to help

  • @jturtle5318

    @jturtle5318

    Ай бұрын

    I agree, although I think basic training on things like preserving evidence and not moving or interfering with gear, clothing, remains etc might be helpful and help volunteer searchers connect with law enforcement.

  • @rhetorical1488

    @rhetorical1488

    Ай бұрын

    Yep just look at the private dive team that solved the missing girl case within 20 minutes of showing up on scene. they have found many missing people in submerged cars since. cops don't like it because it makes them look bad.

  • @brendatomlinson

    @brendatomlinson

    29 күн бұрын

    @@rhetorical1488I think you’re exactly right, egos of LE! Years ago I saw a story on ID of missing teens from the 40s/50s/60s? Can’t recall details but decades later their car was found in a body of water directly on the route they would’ve taken home from the party they attended, not far off the bridge. Like, how do you not drag a lake or river for decades?? As I recall it was volunteers who discovered the car. Poor families never had closure on their children’s fate, in what was an easily solvable accident.

  • @davidcollin1436

    @davidcollin1436

    17 күн бұрын

    The nearby town next to SF has a binder of hundreds of "unsolved murders" They don't even bother to investigate. The "Trailside killer" killed a local girl and the cops were told about a strange stalker that kept contacting her at her bank job. They never followed up on the tip and he killed many more while the cops sat on evidence of the "missing" girl.

  • @ABac-nt1yl

    @ABac-nt1yl

    16 күн бұрын

    Yeah, Controversial??? Ridiculous. If officials have stopped the searching,what is Controversial at that point. It helps the family and cost no one any money. So sick of everything being labeled Controversial. Does anyone keep their hats on indoors, does anyone keep their elbows on the table, that was once controversial.

  • @rt66vintage16
    @rt66vintage16Ай бұрын

    Hi Kyle, My strange hiking story took place in the summer of 1961. My dad led our family on a 2-day hike/climb to the summit of Half Dome in Yosemite. I was 8, and my brother was 6, both in cheap tennis shoes. We didn't see one other person on the cable, not like the crowds of today. We all made it up and down without tragedy, and I don't think it caused any ptsd. But looking back, I do wonder who in their right mind leads a hike to the top of Half Dome with two little average kids? Thanks for your good work, Kyle.

  • @ms-jl6dl

    @ms-jl6dl

    Ай бұрын

    Who in their right mind would give an 8y old and 6y old I-pads? You should be thankfull to your father.

  • @susanchinn9373

    @susanchinn9373

    Ай бұрын

    Good memories. I bet you're a man now

  • @robertbates6057

    @robertbates6057

    24 күн бұрын

    When I was little (mid 60s) my Dad would take me and my two older brothers out into the Everglades fishing. They would often let me out of the boat to play at the waters edge. I know. He should have known better. Got a few stories from then. Later in life, my brothers and I would go out on multi day trips in the ENP, Okefenokee, Blue Ridge, etc... My Dad said once that he wished he'd never taken us out in the Glades and one day we'd never come back. He said, there's things out there that have never been seen Well, we had some great trips and managed to survive. Too old for that stuff now. It's easy to make mistakes in judgement and those mistakes can be serious. Panic is your enemy in the wilderness.

  • @jerrimichael499

    @jerrimichael499

    20 күн бұрын

    My family did this also in the 60s when I was 9

  • @grumpyoldlady_rants
    @grumpyoldlady_rantsАй бұрын

    My husband used to maintain the Hidden Lake trail (many years ago). It’s such an incredibly beautiful area but it is easy to get turned around and lose the trail as the forest canopy and undergrowth is so thick. The North Cascade mountains are often called The American Alps. If you ever get a chance to drive over the North Cascades Highway, I highly recommend doing it.

  • @bianca_1005
    @bianca_1005Ай бұрын

    Hi Kyle! European viewer here 🙋‍♀️ I'm Italian and so, apart from sharing the Alps with our neighbours France, Austria and Switzerland (a WONDERFUL country you absolutely have to visit), we also have the Dolomiti, a very unique mountain range, set in South Tyrol, a fantastic region with delicious food and wine and top professional hospitality. I'm sure you will enjoy your stay in our mountains!

  • @dekikkerfan

    @dekikkerfan

    Ай бұрын

    I'm pretty sure you also 'share' the Alps with Slovenia.

  • @bianca_1005

    @bianca_1005

    Ай бұрын

    @@dekikkerfan ahhhh right! 😭🙏 I was thinking about the north, Slovenia is such an amazing country, the Soča valley is unimaginably beautiful and the mountains breathtaking. My country sadly contributed to bring war and destruction to such beautiful places, I visited Kobarid and its museum which should be definitely more known and left an everlasting impression on me.

  • @william_mac
    @william_macАй бұрын

    You could be walking calmly along one of our trails here in Idaho.... And then all of a sudden a cougar jumps on your back and sinks his teeth into your head. What? Bear spray? No sir. I didn't have the time. That cougar was waiting for me.

  • @_M_a_r_t_i_n_M
    @_M_a_r_t_i_n_MАй бұрын

    Jack Thomas very likely had a sudden massive heart attack or aneurysm which took him out faster than he knew what was happening. Had he have fallen, and even hit his head, he likely would have regained at least enough consciousness/energy to hit the emergency button. So it's very unlikely that he was taken by the elements. Maybe he was in a little too much of a hurry to get back to the trail and was pushing himself a little too much.

  • @fatherofmimes4236
    @fatherofmimes4236Ай бұрын

    Kyle is trying to help you survive and enjoy nature. If you are reading this, subscribe, like and share! He is paying forward, so you don't have to pay with you or your loved ones lives. Thanks ever so much Kyle!

  • @rockymountboy
    @rockymountboyАй бұрын

    Jack Thomas - probably injured and then suffered from hypothermia/freezing. Overheating and quickly taking off clothing is a symptom.

  • @ShawnLangford

    @ShawnLangford

    20 күн бұрын

    Or died suddenly and animals removed his clothes after being undiscovered for so long.

  • @rockymountboy

    @rockymountboy

    20 күн бұрын

    Or perhaps aliens came down and stripped him so they could wear them and pass as humans!

  • @ShawnLangford

    @ShawnLangford

    20 күн бұрын

    Your alien theory is the most logical.

  • @ItIsYourMom
    @ItIsYourMomАй бұрын

    Hey Kyle, I know you’re young, but seriously, 66 isn’t that old!

  • @LeighChambers-de7cp

    @LeighChambers-de7cp

    19 күн бұрын

    I'll turn 68 in three weeks, 66 isn't old. 😊 ❤

  • @ItIsYourMom

    @ItIsYourMom

    17 күн бұрын

    @@LeighChambers-de7cp early Happy Birthday!🎈🙂

  • @screwyourhandle

    @screwyourhandle

    16 күн бұрын

    The average life expectancy in the US was 76 years in 2021. At any rate, for most people, it's an age at which their physical condition is declining, making it riskier to do stuff like hiking in the wilderness alone.

  • @LeighChambers-de7cp

    @LeighChambers-de7cp

    16 күн бұрын

    @@ItIsYourMom Thank you, that's so sweet!

  • @philsmith2444

    @philsmith2444

    10 күн бұрын

    I’m 55 and no longer think 66 is old LOL

  • @scitchmunkey5587
    @scitchmunkey5587Ай бұрын

    Hiking in Switzerland is INCREDIBLE. Spending a day going up a trail around the side of a mountain eight hours from civilisation in any direction to find an inexplicable hut selling hot chocolate as you look down on snow covered peaks is one of the highlights of experience

  • @a.mie.533
    @a.mie.533Ай бұрын

    Regardless of all the tragic: I absolutely understand Rachel's obsession with that cabin - breathtakingly beautiful, that panoramic view, up there!

  • @jturtle5318

    @jturtle5318

    Ай бұрын

    I wonder if the hikers she met told her what the conditions were?

  • @lindawilson4625
    @lindawilson4625Ай бұрын

    Thanks for covering these stories. You'll never know how many lives you have saved by sharing this information.

  • @StevenG222
    @StevenG222Ай бұрын

    All the reason a persons life can come to its end, there is some solace knowing these people died in a place and doing what they loved! Thanks Kyle for remembering them and making their stories forever known!

  • @user-wm3bf7pi3u

    @user-wm3bf7pi3u

    Ай бұрын

    I love sleeping.

  • @StevenG222

    @StevenG222

    Ай бұрын

    @@user-wm3bf7pi3u I think that's how alot people wish they go!

  • @Paratrooper.3695

    @Paratrooper.3695

    Ай бұрын

    It's scary

  • @Paratrooper.3695

    @Paratrooper.3695

    Ай бұрын

    I'd rather fall off a cliff & have a heart attack, Rather than just have a heart attack

  • @Sniperboy5551

    @Sniperboy5551

    Ай бұрын

    @Paratrooper.3695 I’ve never understood why people are afraid of dying, we all have to go some time. I’m not religious, but believing in an afterlife has given me a lot of solace.

  • @colinsmith2005
    @colinsmith2005Ай бұрын

    The saddest thing is , the people they will never be and the futures they will never see. Everyone has a effect on everybody they interact with, every day, a part of a persons being is left behind with every contact they make, a little bit rubs off. Peace to all the family’s in their loss. Kia ora, the People’s Republic of New Zealand.

  • @jarredhodge6381

    @jarredhodge6381

    27 күн бұрын

    Our lives aren't just our own. Our lives also belong to those that we choose to be around or who choose to be around us.

  • @lydiebach3198
    @lydiebach3198Ай бұрын

    Hi Kyle, I am French, living in England, I know very well the French Alps and Switzerland as well, and yes it's beautiful. I am more of a skier than hiker, but it doesn't matter, I love your channel and the way you tell those stories. 😊

  • @Magumbo58
    @Magumbo58Ай бұрын

    I'm from Zimbabwe, Southern Africa. Just watched this video and loved it. Will be binge watching your videos this week😄

  • @stephanielloyd4053

    @stephanielloyd4053

    Ай бұрын

    Glad you found him! Kyle's videos are awesome! Hello from England! ❤🇬🇧

  • @jesseh.5223

    @jesseh.5223

    Ай бұрын

    I hear theres lots of amazing mountains in Zimbabwe, have you hiked?

  • @AimeeAimee444

    @AimeeAimee444

    Ай бұрын

    My goodness Zimbabwe! You live in a dangerous yet beautiful country. Mad respect for you. 😊💯

  • @nai6474

    @nai6474

    Ай бұрын

    Dangerous??? How do you mean?

  • @FORDultra

    @FORDultra

    2 күн бұрын

    @nai6474 how about you Google just that, and you'll find your answer.

  • @laurieb3703
    @laurieb3703Ай бұрын

    Bro I was in a tiny little forest one time geocaching. I got lost. I took a picture of the map because both phones were dying, I had two at the time. I knew I wasn't far from anywhere but that was literally terrifying. I can't imagine what these people go through!

  • @ellenclayton5955
    @ellenclayton5955Ай бұрын

    Never go swimming or hiking alone. We were taught this as small children.

  • @Overstand100
    @Overstand100Ай бұрын

    I know nothing about hiking, but this channel has me locked in. I'm on a binge like never before

  • @missingremote4388

    @missingremote4388

    Ай бұрын

    I subscribed however I do hike what I call day trips

  • @Soundbrigade
    @SoundbrigadeАй бұрын

    As a Swede, I recommend you take a stroll (???) along Kungsleden in Northern Sweden. I am not into hiking, I am maybe to old for that and like some comfort.

  • @Sniperboy5551
    @Sniperboy5551Ай бұрын

    Wow, that Rachel was such a beautiful girl. RIP to her and props to the team who finally solved the mystery.

  • @janefreeman995

    @janefreeman995

    Ай бұрын

    ... it didn't seem like a very long hike. There's the relationship aspect that adds to other possibilities....

  • @BUBBLESPOGO

    @BUBBLESPOGO

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@janefreeman995Hummm, yes.😮

  • @LiveFreeOrDie2A

    @LiveFreeOrDie2A

    Ай бұрын

    What happened to Rachel? She was killed by her own ignorance and arrogance. She’s solo hiking without a GPS phone or A TENT and is warned by descending hikers of the treacherous deadly conditions she’s about to encounter. ☠️ FIFO

  • @automnejoy5308

    @automnejoy5308

    Ай бұрын

    @@LiveFreeOrDie2A She obviously didn't make the smartest decisions, but to be fair, it wasn't as common for people to have GPS in 2019. Even solo hikers. She didn't have a tent because she was heading for that cabin, which she would have undoubtedly arrived at before nightfall if the weather hadn't turned. How many people on that hike pack a tent? They all know they're sleeping at the cabin. The tent is added weight. I'm betting most don't take one. Yeah, she was warned by the descending hikers, but they were probably a lot older than her and she thought she could do it. She was young and fit and had been training to do this hike. She didn't even go off trail like the 66 year old. She just wanted to follow a very popular, relatively short trail to a cabin.

  • @nini_nunez

    @nini_nunez

    28 күн бұрын

    @@janefreeman995 she was alone when the other hikers encountered her… it was the storm

  • @tomifost
    @tomifostАй бұрын

    I dont know about Baker, but when I was on Mt Rainer, it had fog so thick that you cant see more than 10 feet out. That was a moment when I realized how easy it is to get lost.

  • @denisrho1019
    @denisrho1019Ай бұрын

    Kyle: Matterhorn (Mt Cervin in French) was my destination for my 50th birthday anniversary; with friends of mine we rented an app in Zermatt and we ski on the slopes of Matterhorn : fantastic !! Because it was spring we also went for a couple of hikes around, but nothing like what you showed in this video. My point: Zermatt is a unique valley, full of accommodation, you can get their by train (reliable 100%), rented skis, and simply enjoyed the views !!! We are good hikers, but now into mountaineering.

  • @missingremote4388

    @missingremote4388

    Ай бұрын

    in italy they rented an apt

  • @matthewlyons3392
    @matthewlyons3392Ай бұрын

    I think it’s really great that you explain what went wrong in some of these cases and what people could have done differently to survive. People underestimate the wilderness far too often and you have no idea how many peoples’ lives you might be saving by bringing awareness to wilderness survival.

  • @Za7a7aZ
    @Za7a7aZАй бұрын

    Welcome to The Netherlands..you can keep your climbing gear and oxygen tanks at home because my country is as flat as a pancake. Hiking will be a horizontal experience..chances to get lost and die of starvation will be close to impossible because no Forrest or park is so big that you will cross nobodies path. As a matter of fact there are maybe a handful of different places where it will be absolutely silent. There will be always the noise of a highway or an other source of artificial noise to be heared.

  • @concettaworkman5895

    @concettaworkman5895

    Ай бұрын

    Lol, I live in Southwest Michigan, beautiful forests, beaches, no bears, no snakes, no mountains, no sharks, just endless green and trees. No hurricanes, tornadoes or tsunamis. No earthquakes. Four seasons of peaceful lovliness, I can hike to my heart's content. My only fear is humans and pitbulls, and for that I carry a gun on my hip, lol. Open carry. You can even ski in Northern Michigan, yes, we have some mountains, but no avalanches. Heaven on earth. My great-great grandmother was Dutch, and we have Zeeland, Holland, Michigan, and a tulip festival in Holland.

  • @Za7a7aZ

    @Za7a7aZ

    Ай бұрын

    @concettaworkman5895 You are very lucky to live there. I envy the Americans with their beautifull forests and parks. Its on my bucket list whenever I am able to empty my bucket.

  • @JW-mb6tq

    @JW-mb6tq

    Ай бұрын

    Yes the Netherlands are very flat…..I am in Wassenaar standing on a box and I can see you 😂. Greetings neighbor.

  • @CeciliaMorris
    @CeciliaMorrisАй бұрын

    The inside out pants with the underwear intact I think is the biggest clue... He stepped into something like an anthill, spiders, a snake nest, something that caused him to peel off his pants in a hurry to be rid of whatever it was from either harming/biting him or stop the bites from continuing. It's the pants that tell us the most on what the catalyst was. I've done that very thing discovering I stepped into a tick infestation. Those pants with under garments come off in one quick flurry without thinking about anything else while attempting to get away from harm.

  • @holben27

    @holben27

    Ай бұрын

    I'm guessing either ants or hornets attacked him, and he had a heart attack from the shock and toxins from the bites.

  • @ashmaybe9634

    @ashmaybe9634

    Ай бұрын

    Could be. Or paradoxical undressing. It's a disturbing thing to come across 20 miles deep. Not like it's going to be from a methed up tweaker.

  • @BUBBLESPOGO

    @BUBBLESPOGO

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@holben27makes perfect sense.

  • @juliao1255

    @juliao1255

    Ай бұрын

    @holben27 Your answer makes sense. I wonder if it's possible he was squatting for a deuce and pulled them off to run/escape an animal attack, cuz that was quicker than pulling them up? What's your opinion of that idea?

  • @bradsanders407

    @bradsanders407

    Ай бұрын

    There would have been evidence of a large animal attack on his bones. ​@@juliao1255

  • @anniebalsbaugh2093
    @anniebalsbaugh2093Ай бұрын

    Ohio here, my mom hiked half of the Appalachian trail in her 60s.

  • @eagle8505

    @eagle8505

    Ай бұрын

    I bet that was a fun adventure

  • @yanabo7220

    @yanabo7220

    Ай бұрын

    Alone?

  • @anniebalsbaugh2093

    @anniebalsbaugh2093

    Ай бұрын

    @yanabo7220 I forgot to say with my brother, I need to correct that. I think it was an adventure, my mom was a little lady, but very tough, she probably figured what's the worse that can happen, I raised 12 kids in poverty without any help.haha

  • @yanabo7220

    @yanabo7220

    Ай бұрын

    @@anniebalsbaugh2093 That's amazing! Seriously tough!!

  • @brendatomlinson

    @brendatomlinson

    29 күн бұрын

    My SIL wants to hike the AT, she’s mentioned it enough times I think she’s sincere. She’s 68, overweight & out of shape. I’ve told her about the feral people supposedly living in the woods but she seems undeterred. Is there a short, easy portion of the hike? Or do you have any other suggestions I could share? I’m getting close to sending her the really scary KZread videos of murders etc. And the documentary “They Called Him Mostly Harmless.” She may be preparing and I’m just unaware but I seriously doubt it. Thanks for reading and for any suggestions you can offer.

  • @ChocolateEClaire16_
    @ChocolateEClaire16_Ай бұрын

    You’ve quickly become one of my favorite KZreadrs! I don’t even hike much bc we live at the beach. But your stories are incredibly well done 🫶🏼

  • @laurenrowell9251
    @laurenrowell9251Ай бұрын

    Hey Kyle! I'm an American citizen, but I'm a resident of Switzerland for 20 years now! My husband and I live in the Valais canton - we can see the Matterhorn from our verandah! The canton is pronounced "val AY" in French (and "Valais" is the French spelling) and "VAL iss" in German ("Wallis" is the German spelling). We live about 10 minutes from Italy (as the crow flies) and 40 minutes from France (by train). We go to the farmer's markets in Italia a lot. The weather is beautiful here - come and visit!! Fun Fact: Lots of German consonants are "Americanised" to sell German products. Take Volkswagen (the cars and vans), for example. In America, the word is pronounced just as it's spelled. However, in German, "Volks" is pronounced as "Folks" and means "people"; and "wagen" is pronounced as "VA gen" and means "wanderer." Therefore, Volkswagen really just means "a means by which people can wander about."

  • @pipmitchell7059

    @pipmitchell7059

    Ай бұрын

    Slip of the typing finger regarding Valais, Lauren. In French it's pronounced "val eh". The s is silent, the syllables more or less equally stressed.

  • @Kristenoyinbo

    @Kristenoyinbo

    Ай бұрын

    What an amazing life! I can't wait to visit Switzerland and Norway ox

  • @ItIsYourMom

    @ItIsYourMom

    Ай бұрын

    Wow, nice!’🙂

  • @laurenrowell9251

    @laurenrowell9251

    Ай бұрын

    @@pipmitchell7059 Yes, I made a mistake, and thanks for pointing this out to me! However, it's "val AY" in French. We live here, that's how everyone pronounces it! However, in French, the second syllable is always stressed, not the first, so the canton really is pronounced as, "val AY", because of those voyelles doubles.Thanks for your input!

  • @laurenrowell9251

    @laurenrowell9251

    Ай бұрын

    @@Kristenoyinbo Oh you have to come here! We'll be getting tomatoes from Sardinia in about a month! I fill my freezer with fresh tomato sauce - and you should see the spring veggies. We get artichokes that are about 1.5 inches long! You just have to trim them a bit, (because the "choke" hasn't formed yet), stir fry them in olive oil and butter, and serve them with chervil, tarragon, garlic, and cream sauce, with lemon on the side. Better than popcorn to eat while watching a movie! ~ France is the place to go in the autumn for grapes, duck, wine, and the Alsace region. And don't forget about Toulouse and the Atlantic ocean area (France). We can be in Barcelona in 7 hours by car, on the Mediterranean Sea. The waters are turquoise!

  • @suzannecooke2055
    @suzannecooke2055Ай бұрын

    Those GPS things should have a "where's my phone" sort of ping service.

  • @RevBTB
    @RevBTBАй бұрын

    Thank you for always telling these stories. it helps honor the memory of the ones who never returned from their adventures. I hope you feel appreciated.

  • @simonefeaster5131
    @simonefeaster5131Ай бұрын

    Kyle, Switzerland is extraordinarily beautiful!! Most of the country looks like the most pristine national park imaginable. I hope you get there some day. You’ll be blown away!

  • @VioletJoy
    @VioletJoyАй бұрын

    I am not a hiker but still enjoy this channel. I'm constantly flabbergasted by the number of seasoned hikers who take unnecessary risks when hiking - bad weather, but enough water, and/or improper gear/safety tools. To me, it's just not worth life or death, especially if there are better times of the year to hike. As far as the highest mountains, where it's always cold at the top, I just don't understand the draw. Why not just enjoy the thousands of other places to hike? But that's me.

  • @koalabear3427
    @koalabear3427Күн бұрын

    I like how respectful and sensitive you are regarding the hikers and their families.

  • @charlieswearingen500
    @charlieswearingen50022 күн бұрын

    I worked in that area for the Forest Service for about thirty years and knew Jack as an acquaintance. He was in good physical condition, knew all the landmarks, and knew his way around that area. Sadly, he was found only about 15 miles from the trailhead, almost all downhill on a clearly discernible trail to the trailhead. Many medical events, such as kidney failure, stroke, and heart attack, cause you to feel like you have to go to the bathroom immediately, and that might explain the inside-out jeans and underwear.

  • @Mia_linking595
    @Mia_linking595Ай бұрын

    Switzerland, my home, is the most beautiful place in the world

  • @John-rw2zf

    @John-rw2zf

    Ай бұрын

    My name and ancestry is Swiss. Every picture I have ever seen of Switzerland is absolutely amazing. In town or country it is all beautiful. I doubt that there is a single slum or piece of litter anywhere to be found.

  • @jesseh.5223

    @jesseh.5223

    Ай бұрын

    I think Iceland is a strong contender! Have you ever been? It's an amazing, almost alien landscape ❤

  • @laurenrowell9251

    @laurenrowell9251

    Ай бұрын

    Where do you live? I live in the Valais canton, on the border of Italia.

  • @John-rw2zf

    @John-rw2zf

    Ай бұрын

    @jesseh.5223 My only claim so far to anything resembling high adventure has been to watch the Travel Channel. There are definitely many amazingly beautiful places on earth, but alas, I am just a humble Fuddy Duddy of limited means. Faint not for me, however, because all things considered, life has been good to me. Thanks to you, I will now make a concerted effort to investigate Iceland on my next KZread vacation. Take care, my good friend.

  • @laurenrowell9251

    @laurenrowell9251

    Ай бұрын

    @@John-rw2zf I agree! If I see a soda bottle or a straw on the road, I'm shocked! Whenever I go back to America on business, I'm astounded at the trash I see everywhere. Even the train platforms are spotless.

  • @danemmerich6775
    @danemmerich6775Ай бұрын

    Visit the Dolomites in Northern Italy. It is Beautiful. Great places to hike and camp etc.

  • @beewasere

    @beewasere

    Ай бұрын

    Agreed. I’ll never forget the dolomites. ❤❤❤

  • @bianca_1005

    @bianca_1005

    Ай бұрын

    Ah, I wanted to say just that! I'm Italian and the Dolomiti are spectacular. Great hospitality, too, in Südtirol they are top professionals

  • @lorelay2882
    @lorelay2882Ай бұрын

    Swiss hiker/viewer here - Thanks for also diving into international cases! You're welcome anytime to the Alps & we'll bring you on some nice hikes!

  • @Clarachk
    @ClarachkАй бұрын

    Your tact in telling those tragic yet important stories is very commendable. Thank you for yet another wonderful listen. May their souls and those of their families souls be at peace.

  • @margysfavourites8444
    @margysfavourites8444Ай бұрын

    I live in a mountainous area of southern British Columbia Canada, the biggest majority of hikers in my area are well over fifty! Rarely a problem……

  • @nm-dn1pt
    @nm-dn1ptАй бұрын

    I'm 37 years old, have been doing light hiking here and there but have recently been diving into the depths of REAL hiking/camping. I am so happy to have found this page!! You're right when you say that most of your viewers don't follow. Well, I am!!! Thank you so much for your tools and lessons!! Truly, I have learned so much!!

  • @j.sargent9172

    @j.sargent9172

    Ай бұрын

    It's funny how many city folk, call rving or car camping, actually camping and roughing it 😂 walking with everything on your back is so rewarding, and see things most never will

  • @nm-dn1pt

    @nm-dn1pt

    Ай бұрын

    @@j.sargent9172 Did you think I meant driving? I agree with you, haha. I just don't understand how it pertains to my statement?

  • @j.sargent9172

    @j.sargent9172

    Ай бұрын

    @@nm-dn1pt I am in agreement, just an observation I've noticed with a lot of people. Not you

  • @automnejoy5308

    @automnejoy5308

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@j.sargent9172 As one of the many females that bleed massively out of the crotch and throw up from cramps and migraines, and pain from walking with swollen ankles and knees, I have a different definition of the word "rewarding." It involves consistent access to medicine, supplies, lots of fresh clothing and underwear as well as running water. Somehow I don't think that will all fit in one pack. But you do you.

  • @j.sargent9172

    @j.sargent9172

    Ай бұрын

    @@automnejoy5308 that's not camping

  • @stevehaney7584
    @stevehaney7584Ай бұрын

    I've hiked to the Lookout above Hidden Lake many times and, yes, hiking in late October alone is generally not a good idea unless you are very certain about the weather forecast. It doesn't sound like she had done the hike before and that is also problematic. It would have been way safer for her turn around when she ran into the couple who were walking down. The trail itself is difficult because there is one abrupt turn to the right on the way up and if you don't know the trail, it would be so easy to miss the turn and continue straight ahead and thus get lost.

  • @concettaworkman5895

    @concettaworkman5895

    Ай бұрын

    I know, this is so sad for her. I wish she had taken a guide, and checked the weather. Poor dear, beautiful gal.

  • @lancebarnes9044
    @lancebarnes9044Ай бұрын

    My dad vanished on a hike. 32 years ago, my dad took a hike down the block to get a pack of cigarettes, and nobody's seen him since. It was the same day that the neighbor's wife, Luanda, disappeared.

  • @Scott-di8dg

    @Scott-di8dg

    Ай бұрын

    Erm

  • @ea8269

    @ea8269

    Ай бұрын

    Is it a true story?

  • @hautepinkrae8084

    @hautepinkrae8084

    Ай бұрын

    So sorry you are living with this. I be praying for your family.

  • @andreah1104

    @andreah1104

    Ай бұрын

    😂

  • @krasmussen7514

    @krasmussen7514

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@ea8269 it's not a true story because I heard the same story as a child.

  • @tashuntka
    @tashuntkaАй бұрын

    Had a stroke.. Died what he loved doing, and where he loved being.... 🙏.

  • @christinekranz4844
    @christinekranz4844Ай бұрын

    Hi Kyle!!! Yes Switzerland is very beautiful! After you go there (or even before!), you also need to check out New Zealand and Scotland.......... Such beauty you can't put into words......... Love your channel!

  • @Please_Dont_Call_It_Frisco
    @Please_Dont_Call_It_FriscoАй бұрын

    It's so easy to get lost hiking. Easier than people think. Growing up in Oregon, we would backpack in the Mt. Hood National Forest often. Help just isn't around. Of course, when I was a kid in the 80s, there weren't cell phones, sat phones, or navigation tools other than compasses and maps. Our parents had my older sisters and myself wear whistles, and we were taught that if we were lost, to find a "tree buddy" and hug the tree trunk and blow our whistle until we were found. Four experiences from our family camping trips will stay with me forever- three terrifying, and one funny. I was about 8 when we took a week-long trip to a beautiful spot call Eden Park next to Ladd Creek. We went for a day hike from our campsite, and I was up ahead of my family when I spotted something that caused me to dash forward. It was a little black bear cub, and I fully intended to pet it. The roar from my father behind me stopped me in my tracks and made me cry. But he was right. The lesson I learned was that a mama bear is always near her cubs and will protect them. On a different trip, the scariest and funniest moments happened. I was little, and still slept with my blanket, a big orange thing named "GiGi". On the way to the trailhead, I insisted that GiGi would come with us. "No" was my parents' response, telling me I was old enough to sleep without him. I stopped negotiating, but when we got to the trailhead, my dad started loading my pack with the lightest items- the freeze-dried food we would eat for the trip. He finished attaching the tin pots and pans to my pack and started packing the rest of the packs. I quietly went to the backseat and unloaded all the food and put GiGi it my pack. Off we went, the pots and pans clanging against my leg.. We hiked all afternoon and had almost reached the campsite my Dad had picked when my sister, Leslie, had to pee. Leslie was shy and went a little too far to find privacy. She didn't come back. Over an hour passed, and my parents worry grew into an almost-frenzy. After 2 hours, they left my oldest sister, Lynn, with me and they hiked off in different directions into the darkening night. Dad eventually got all the way back to the car where a very scared Leslie was waiting. He was PISSED when he had to go back a second time for the food I had left on the back seat of the car. The third trip was higher in elevation, and was more remote than we had ventured as a family before. Lynn was goofing around and ran ahead without looking. My Dad starting running after her, and caught her arm right before she got to the edge of a sheer cliff. Lynn didn't die that day, but she did die in another tragic event. A different story for a different time.

  • @hiho8084
    @hiho8084Ай бұрын

    What I learned here, especially as you get older....NEVER hike alone. The wilderness has a way of letting you know that you are never 100% prepared, no matter how experienced you are. Prayers to the friends and family of these people who lost their lives doing what they loved.

  • @workinprogresssince1974
    @workinprogresssince1974Ай бұрын

    With the first chap, it could be as simple as he just had a heart attack and died. Even fit healthy people die from unexpected heart attacks. There is probably no mystery in this at all. At least he died doing what he loved and hopefully he didn't suffer.

  • @tommybewick
    @tommybewickАй бұрын

    Great video Kyle. I have to admit I thought for a while you started doing videos for click bait and sensationalism but I have changed my opinion. Your respect for the families of these people is obvious, as well as your desire to educate the hiking community of dangers out there and how to mitigate that risk. Your passion for hikers and the hiking community is greatly appreciated 👍

  • @garyblack2858
    @garyblack2858Ай бұрын

    Hey Kyle, it is really cool how you make donations to the search and rescue organizations in the video. Good on you! Shows how grateful you are for this channel and its growth. Way to give back.

  • @retriever19golden55
    @retriever19golden55Ай бұрын

    Kyle, you are providing a great service. While some of these accidents are pure accidents, and unavoidable, you do a great job of pointing out things which could have been avoided. Because of your advice, I'm purchasing a GPS locator for my son and his partner who camp and hike on the PCN trail.

  • @ChicaG-vg7pj
    @ChicaG-vg7pjАй бұрын

    If there's snow, it's possible to build a shelter with that. There are videos on the internet with instructions of how to build them. Of course there are limits, depending on the conditions and requirements for the shelters (some require tree branches). However, it's still good information to have. When we were little, my Dad would build us an igloo for the winter, and you'd be surprised how much heat they retain.

  • @suzyvivian7514
    @suzyvivian7514Ай бұрын

    Why was Jack naked? That bothers me.

  • @paulannable3734

    @paulannable3734

    Ай бұрын

    Hypothermic people routinely remove their clothes. I might also think scavenging wild animal, although the turned inside out trousers make you think probably not.

  • @kendreviusclincy4377

    @kendreviusclincy4377

    Ай бұрын

    Bothers me too

  • @joyful_tanya

    @joyful_tanya

    Ай бұрын

    Yeah that's what we are told, but could that be a cover for something more nefarious?​@@paulannable3734

  • @ninjillify

    @ninjillify

    Ай бұрын

    Probably paradoxical undressing.

  • @LiveFreeOrDie2A

    @LiveFreeOrDie2A

    Ай бұрын

    Paradoxical undressing due to hypothermia makes the most sense until you remember he had a GPS phone he was using daily to update family. So the fact he never used it to SOS, points to something sudden and unexpected..

  • @Remarkablepepper37
    @Remarkablepepper37Ай бұрын

    This is Shreya, im 23 and im from Chennai, India. I am lowkey obsessed with your channel. It has been amazing to watch you grow kyle. your passion for hiking and the respect you show for the fellow hikers is so unique to this channel. it is funny to think, literally across the globe and across a hemisphere, i am able to listen and take lessons from you.

  • @Morbidollhouse
    @Morbidollhouse14 минут бұрын

    I’ll be honest, Switzerland is the one place I want to go back to. A literal fairytale. Looks exactly like the photos, the people are super nice, and it’s VERY clean. Only downside is that it was way more expensive than here in the US but that was years ago so it could have changed. Definitely worth visiting!

  • @queenpoppy5189
    @queenpoppy5189Ай бұрын

    Repeat viewer from Scotland!🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿

  • @FrozeMoments
    @FrozeMomentsАй бұрын

    I spent a few months a couple of times in Interlaken , Zug and Immense, Switzerland as well as Chamonix, France. It’s like a dream. Mount Rigi , Mont Blanc ect. Well worth any amount of money. I saw the fist Lord of the Rings in Chamonix where the first Winter Olympics was held. It’s like I walked out of the Theater and into the movies Snow scenes. It’s so surreal

  • @kenduffy-of8xb
    @kenduffy-of8xbАй бұрын

    Idaho Mountain Search and Rescue is an amazing all-volunteer group! I remember reading about finding the hiker's remains in the Sawtooths and IMSARU went and recovered his remains for his family. They have even gone on search and rescue missions in Oregon and Nevada. Definitely going to donate!

  • @bravegirladventures5311
    @bravegirladventures531126 күн бұрын

    I’m from Canada. Two years ago I checked off another bucket list item and spent 10 days trail running near the foot of the Matterhorn. I’ve been to the Theodul Glacier and it is stunning. I remember wondering how many bodies may be buried in that glacier. This climber would have been down there when I visited the glacier. I live in the Canadian Rockies and have 20,000 trail miles under my belt in some of the most beautiful country in the world, but Switzerland made even MY jaw drop. Switzerland is vastly more beautiful than can be imagined. Definitely go! The mountaineering cemetery in Zermatt is a poignantly beautiful place. There are hundreds of very old and some very new headstones that not only say the name and date of the climber and their accident, but what mountain they died on and whether it was rockfall, avalanche, or fall that killed them. In many cases, their climbing gear, ice axe, ropes, or boots are draped permanently over their headstone. It will move you to tears.

  • @octosquatch.
    @octosquatch.Ай бұрын

    A couple space blankets and half a foam sleeping pad can go a long way.

  • @janefreeman995

    @janefreeman995

    Ай бұрын

    A lighter as well.

  • @zannadunstrand6289
    @zannadunstrand6289Ай бұрын

    We’re not gonna talk about why TF Jack Thomas pants were inside-out with underwear still attached..?

  • @katarinatibai8396

    @katarinatibai8396

    Ай бұрын

    A friend of me had to rip off his jeans in the middle of a hike because two wasp were flying in there and stung him. Maybe that's hapend to this man and he was allergic or got a heart attack after that. Bees 🐝 or wasps can kill you when there are many of them, and that man was elderly, so the poisen could have affected him more. 🤔

  • @saltpeter7429

    @saltpeter7429

    Ай бұрын

    Check out other missing hiker body recoveries that share this same " oddity ". Jared Atedaro's bones were recovered years later in a higher altitude area than searched in Colorado, he was a toddler. Bart Schleyer was found ( a skull cap) oon the backside of a lake near his campsite deep in Yukon territory. I believe both had a pair of pants found turned inside out.

  • @cindybrown2826
    @cindybrown2826Ай бұрын

    As a mother I was in scouting for 12 consecutive years. One of the biggest pieces of advise was the buddy system. Never go alone always take a buddy.

  • @trixdeblock
    @trixdeblock4 күн бұрын

    Hai! I am half Dutch/half Swiss! My mom grew up close to where that climber was found, but I've never heard of it. Very interesting! The kanton (like province/state) is called either Valais, which is the french pronunciation, or Wallis, which is the German pronunciation. I usually spend a couple of months in the area with family every year and definitely recommend going there! Especially to Wallis since the area has so many massive and beautiful mountains, though in my biased opinion I'd say the German 'half' of Wallis is way more fun!

  • @jen_gem
    @jen_gemАй бұрын

    Switzerland, my home, is the most beautiful place in the world.

  • @idid138

    @idid138

    Ай бұрын

    Lucky you! I can't argue, only seen on TV, but always say, "I wish I could live there..." You are blessed! 🙏

  • @user-gn8if3fq9j

    @user-gn8if3fq9j

    Ай бұрын

    Gee wonder what happened?

  • @laurenrowell9251

    @laurenrowell9251

    Ай бұрын

    @@UpwardsIntoTheRabbitHole Well, look at you!

  • @JonasWhite
    @JonasWhiteАй бұрын

    Dude, your thumbnails look like your in a week long bender…😆

  • @kendreviusclincy4377

    @kendreviusclincy4377

    Ай бұрын

    I mean like he been smoking just by breathing, weed got him in a head lock,

  • @littlepinkniki
    @littlepinknikiАй бұрын

    From South Africa - the hiking here is unbelievable. Definitely worth adding to your bucket list!

  • @joshnorthwoods
    @joshnorthwoodsАй бұрын

    Good job leaving his name out. He didn't respond so he probably wants to be left alone. Good on you!