He survived stormy weather and multiple falls after reaching a Colorado mountain summit on his own.
A hiker was rescued from a mountain in the US state of Colorado after being apparently left behind the previous day by his colleagues during an office retreat.
The unnamed man got lost and found himself without phone signal after being left by colleagues who went ahead without him, the Chaffee County Search and Rescue team said.
He endured stormy weather and multiple falls before being found in a "large search effort" the next morning. He was stabilised and taken to hospital, but there has been no further update on his condition.
In their statement, officials said the hiker reached the summit on his own at about 11:30 local time (17:30 GMT), but became "disorientated" on his descent.
His colleagues are said to have told him that he was on the wrong route, and suggested that he regain the trail.
Sounds more like he left them, not that they left him.
From another news story covering this:
"The man reached the peak of Mount Shavano around 11:30 a.m. but, when he turned to descend the mountain, became disoriented when he found that the group had picked up the belongings being used as trail markers as they hiked down before him, according to search and rescue officials."
I don't know, my first thought was a rewards trip I went on where I could hear the salesman on the balcony next to me talking about all the cocaine he'd been doing.
He stopped for a break. His colleagues went ahead without him(why? Why would you leave someone behind?) He got disoriented. Drops a pin for help (aka asks for help). They tell him to hike back up then come down on the right trail.
Why he didn’t we don’t know. His colleagues didn’t call for a search party. They didn’t go after him. He had to try to get enough signal to do that himself. Where were they at?
If your colleague isn’t showing up in a reasonable amount of time wouldn’t you call someone to help look for him?
Yeah he’ll be pissed and probably look for a new job.
I read the article and I think you paint just as an inaccurate picture. His colleagues went ahead without him. They friggin left him behind. They told him he was going the wrong way via messaging. It's not like he insisted they were wrong as they are telling him to his face he was going the wrong way.
The article doesn't say why they went ahead of him and no one stayed behind, so we can only speculate and hope that that level of carelessness was actually warranted.
Not only did they leave him behind, but they also picked up the markers they brought on the way down. They created the conditions for him to become lost in the first place.
While I've ever been a fan of work treats, I'd be more in support of them if they were opportunities to abandon social leech failsons and let nature run its course.
I don't know anything about the person in this story, but most coworkers wouldn't be willing to just trudge on when the guy everyone describes as "the nicest" appears to be disoriented and lost.
This is definitely a story of someone who had no idea what they were doing, had no experience with nature, and just didn’t care. He barely survived his own ignorance.
I read the article, apparently better than you. Idiots separated himself from the group, went the wrong way, and wouldn’t listen to others who warned him. He did this to himself specifically because he’s an idiot. See how that works?
Don’t project your own life onto a random internet article.