Home Forums Bike Forum Helvellyn deaths- "safety restrictions include allowing only guided walks"

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  • Helvellyn deaths- "safety restrictions include allowing only guided walks"
  • munrobiker
    Free Member

    http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-cumbria-33242230

    Sounds unlikely to me but that does sound like a daft idea- surely most people that go up a mountain (on a bike or otherwise), and especially along something like Striding Edge, have an appreciation of the danger?

    matt_outandabout
    Full Member

    Daft idea dreamt up by someone with not enough knowledge and nice headline grabbing idea.

    mikewsmith
    Free Member

    head hits table….

    Though I can see why some people want to try and stop people hurting themselves. I’ve rescued people on Striding edge who were a long way out of their depth. Sings would probably be a better option.

    whitestone
    Free Member

    Knee jerk reaction from friend/acquaintance of someone who’s died. I know of people who’ve died from tripping on the kerb at the side of the road – do we need guides for that as well?

    Not going to happen as it would be impossible/impractical to police.

    duckman
    Full Member

    Christ,imagine if that catches on up here where the proper hills are. One problem I saw at striding edge was how it attracted people because of it’s location. I climbed it in the xmas holidays and was prepped for winter,a lot of folk weren’t and were just looking to kill a day with a wee walk.

    jambalaya
    Free Member

    It’s not going to happen. Striding Edge is quite tame in reality. That being said I went up there had a look a decided it wasn’t for me.

    slowoldman
    Full Member

    “There are calls for safety measures to be introduced on Helvellyn, after the fifth death on the mountain this year”.

    Calls by who? There is only one name mentioned in the article who as a fell-walker should know better.

    sheeps
    Full Member

    How the hell would they police it?? I went (was taken) across Striding Edge when I was 8 months old in a back-pack carrier. My parents were regular hill-walkers, knew the risks and were properly equipped (from the photos) even in 1974! Still one of my favorite ridges in the Lakes, but it seems to have become a honey-pot for tourists with no idea of the risk, or without proper equipment – I’ve seen the flip-flops and shorts only brigade and spend the rest of the day hoping not to see a yellow sky taxi arriving.

    jam-bo
    Full Member

    the drive to the car park will be a higher risk for most.

    cp
    Full Member

    At least the mountain rescue fella talks sense.

    whitestone
    Free Member

    And what about the fell races and long distance events? Winter climbers?

    MrNice
    Free Member

    the problem in the lakes is how accessible everything is. People don’t realize that Striding Edge in winter condition is not like a stroll up Catbells in summer. Even if you’re properly equipped with summer walking kit that doesn’t cover what you need in winter. it’s scary seeing people sliding all over and grabbing onto each other as you stamp past with crampons on

    tomd
    Free Member

    It’s not going to happen. Striding Edge is quite tame in reality. That being said I went up there had a look a decided it wasn’t for me.

    +1 but I have also got to it and turned back. It was April and there was still ice / snow on the edge and I didn’t have winter kit with me. I’m sure some folk would just have a bash, neglecting that in those conditions one slip and you’d be off.

    As for

    the drive to the car park will be a higher risk for most.

    I very much doubt it. The UK has about 34 deaths per billion passenger km (source: EU (2012), Transport in Figures Statistical Pocketbook 2012). So assuming you drive around 100km to get to Helvellyn you have a probability of kicking the bucket of somewhere around 3 in a million.

    Assuming around 100,000 climb Helvellyn a year (Ben Nevis gets around this number, I assume Hellvelyn would be less) and 5 die. That’s 50 in a million chance of killing yourself, so an order of magnitude more risky.

    lowey
    Full Member

    What a load of Bollocks.

    postierich
    Free Member

    Weather can get a tad iffy sometimes two climbers said wtf are you doing up here 🙂
    1466303_10151857879303802_1757385894_n by Richard Munro[/url], on Flickr
    Riding Helvellyn tonight looks a bit moist out

    excitable1
    Free Member

    I agree with the Mountain Rescue guy, a guide wouldn’t prevent the deaths on there at all.

    That said, both Striding Edge and Swirral Edge are not easy walks and the penalty for failure is death. If you add weather to that you’re almost guaranteed failures. Both those edges are very exposed and the weather can turn up there in minutes. It can also be a calm sunny day on one side of an edge and blowing a gale on the other. I’ve ridden all over the Lakes and one minute I’ve been taking pictures of sunshine and rainbows and the next been wondering if I need the flying yellow taxi myself !

    What upsets me is when the children are killed on there. A 7 year old was killed last year during the winter. That, whilst very tragic, was both irresponsible and stupid.

    I think warning signs at either end of the edges would be sensible. Warning the casual walkers of the dangers and asking them not to take small children and guiding them towards the safer routes. There’s an un-written rule anyway that if you’re stood at the hole in the wall and you can’t see Striding Edge because of cloud or snow… then don’t carry on.

    I’ve seen Striding edge when approaching from the south end of the Helvellyn range, it was a fine weekday in June and you could see people like ants marching along the top. Unless you are desperate to say you’ve done it, don’t mind crowds or have the ability to get there quickly if the weather clears up unexpectedly on a bad day, there are better walks to do imo.

    munrobiker
    Free Member

    Signage probably isn’t a bad idea, maybe highlighting the number of deaths (like they do on A roads saying “x number of people died in 2014”) to really hammer the point home. But leaving the choice open to the majority- the competent people who have at least a vague idea of what they’re up to- is essential in my mind.

    ScottChegg
    Free Member

    I recall being on Skye and watching the Mountain rescue carrying a body down to the Sligachan hotel.

    He wasn’t a climber, he was having a stroll in the heather and slipped and banged his head.

    Accidents do happen, and they always will. I don’t see how misguided good intentions will stop them.

    Tom_W1987
    Free Member

    If anyone stops me from walking helvellyn because I’m not being guided, I’ll throw them off the side.

    They’ll be classifying adrenalin as a class B drug next and HR will be piss testing for it in the workplace.

    Nobeerinthefridge
    Free Member

    If anyone stops me from walking helvellyn because I’m not being guided, I’ll throw them off the side

    People who think mountains have ‘sides’ maybe shouldn’t be allowed… 😆

    fergal
    Free Member

    I think who ever owns Helvellyn should charge, turn styles at the bottom of the edge and some handrail would be a good idea.

    edlong
    Free Member

    A nothing of a story with an overblown headline to attract attention – I’d expect better from the beeb to be honest:

    “There are calls for” turns out to mean, apparently, “One person has suggested…”

    It’s all a bit Daily Mail really.

    GregMay
    Free Member

    fergal – Member
    I think who ever owns Helvellyn should charge, turn styles at the bottom of the edge and some handrail would be a good idea.

    Kinda like Everest then 😉

    Tom_W1987
    Free Member

    People who think mountains have ‘sides’ maybe shouldn’t be allowed…

    😛

    fergal
    Free Member

    Yeah piss poor journalism, back in the early nineties Jimmy saville proposed putting benches at intervals up the tourist path on the Ben to make it safer! this idea gained some momentum with certain misguided individuals, the benches were actually purchased and sat gathering dust in a yard somewhere, the stupidity of the general public is not to be under estimated.

    tragically1969
    Free Member

    excitable1

    That said, both Striding Edge and Swirral Edge are not easy walks and the penalty for failure is could possibly be death if you fall at the wrong place

    FTFY

    jambalaya
    Free Member

    🙂 postierich

    continuity
    Free Member

    The only time striding edge is dangerous to a healthy adult is if it is full on winter conditions, covered with a thick verglas, and you’re wearing only a pair of underpants with holes in them.

    whitestone
    Free Member

    I’d add gusty winds to that: a friend was out in the Cairngorms one winter and his companion was blown off the (wide) ridge they were on and killed.

    martinhutch
    Full Member

    It’s possible to contrive to trip over on any bit of any Lakes path. The only difference is that if you do that at the right point on Striding Edge, Swirral Edge, Sharp Edge, Crib Goch etc you tend to end up a few hundred feet lower with your legs sticking out of a boulder field.

    Humans can make anything dangerous if enough of them are passing by it.

    Doesn’t mean they shouldn’t be left to get on with it, as far as mountains are concerned though.

    whitestone
    Free Member

    A lot of this is about perceived risk as opposed to genuine risk. For example over twice as many people die each year in the UK from falling down stairs as in motorbike accidents. The mortality rate would show the opposite as many more people have stairs in their home than ride a motorbike. But we don’t think of the home as being a particularly dangerous place.

    In over 30 years of climbing around the world I had just one accident, I wasn’t just bumbling around either, yet climbing/mountaineering is seen as dangerous. It’s high risk in certain situations but in most it’s a lot less risky than your average trail centre. It’s all about perception.

    ben98
    Free Member

    I was stood on the top of helvelen at 2am on Saturday, I also summited 10 other Wainwrights between 10:50 and 3:25

    brooess
    Free Member

    UK needs to have a proper debate with itself about risk. We’re peculiarly stupid about understanding it IMO. Media only reporting when things going wrong is a massive part of the general public misunderstanding the risks of activities like hillwalking, cycling etc

    People won’t ride a bike because ‘it’s risky’. Instead they eat bad food and live a sedentary lifestyle and kill themselves that way instead… in far higher numbers and at far greater cost to the taxpayer…

    You don’t achieve anything in life without taking risks at some level. First of all you have to accept that risk exists, rather than this idea that anything which involves risk must be avoided at all costs.

    Then, the secret is to make an assessment of that risk, work out how you can minimise it and have a contingency plan for dealing with the situation if it goes wrong.

    Skydiving is an interesting example. Somewhere between 500 and 1,000 jumps will take place every week in summer at every UK dropzone of which there are 30. The training and the procedures in place to manage the risk are rigorous, very rigorous and the culture is such that anyone who doesn’t adhere to them is spoken to, or banned.

    BPA stats show “Once a skydiver is fully trained, the average injury rate is 0.3 injuries/1000 jumps and the fatality rate is about 1/100,000” yet you ask anyone who’s never jumped about skydiving and they think you’re mental and have a deathwish. This, in my experience is because there’s never anything in the media pointing out that thousand of people skydived safely last month, just the occasional story of a death… so you get the mad misperception of risk and danger based on totally skewed reporting in the media, with a lack of critical thinking to balance this out with an awareness that only deaths make the news…

    Meanwhile “A survey by road safety charity Brake and Direct Line found three in 10 drivers send or read texts while driving, and one in eight using apps”…

    jonathan
    Free Member

    Just trying to get new life insurance – silly premium because company decided their cut-off for “risky climbing” was UIAA 5 and above, so anything above a VS. Bonkers. I could be climbing E7s and be paying the same (I’d need a skill/strength transplant though).

    Also, being picky I know, but:

    What upsets me is when the children are killed on there. A 7 year old was killed last year during the winter. That, whilst very tragic, was both irresponsible and stupid.

    Killed where? In the Lakes? Don’t remember that. There was a 7 year old killed in a skiing accident in France this winter, but that’s all I can think of (and is a completely different situation)

    whitestone
    Free Member

    @brooess

    +1

    Like I said it’s about perceived risk which bears little (more likely zero) resemblance to the actual level of risk.

    Allied to this is the idea that something can be “made safe” – insurance ads are great for this, they give the impression that by taking out insurance for a particular activity then it becomes safe. Eh?? A piece of paper (or more likely a file on a computer somewhere) is going to protect you from falling off a mountain, how does that work then?

    @jonathan

    I was once informed by an life insurance assessor that participants in so called “risk sports” were no more of a financial risk to the company than the general population as the increased risk of injury from the sport was far outweighed by the fact that they were much healthier overall. At that time when they asked about such things it was more about stats gathering.

    tragically1969
    Free Member

    I was stood on the top of helvelen at 2am on Saturday, I also summited 10 other Wainwrights between 10:50 and 3:25

    Not quite sure how that is relevant to the discussion but on BG support by any chance ?

    MrNice
    Free Member

    re the life insurance – some companies are better than others. I once got a very detailed questionnaire about different types of climbing which seemed to take into account the relative risks of sport, trad, mountaineering, soloing etc. It made more sense than lumping in fat punters placing gear every 2ft (i.e. me) with someone like Alex Honnold.

    Jehosophat
    Free Member

    People won’t ride a bike because ‘it’s risky’. Instead they eat bad food and live a sedentary lifestyle and kill themselves that way instead… in far higher numbers and at far greater cost to the taxpayer…

    Yep – that’s the bit that really grates. I agree entirely.

    There is nothing particularly unique about Striding Edge. If we need guides there, arguably we need guides every time we leave our front door. Hence this will never happen – but the fact it has even been reported shows how messed up our attitude to risk is. Our daily lifestyle choices with regards to food, drink and exercise constitute the biggest risk to almost all of us – followed by our driving behaviour. The % of fatalities per hill-walk must be spectacularly, vanishingly small.

    ben98
    Free Member

    Not quite sure how that is relevant to the discussion but on BG support by any chance ?

    I pressed send before I finished.
    I was going to say that no one was going to be out stopping people doing things at that time, so its a stupid suggestion. Also, doing that I experienced some of the most hostile conditions I’ve ever come across, the fog was so thick I couldn’t see 1m in front of me, the rain was constant and it was dark, so my headlight just glared off the fog reducing visibility further (gonna be honest it doesn’t sound as bad as it was), and I was in a light waterproof, T-shirt, shorts and trainers the whole way. Having equipment doesn’t make you safe, knowing how to look after yourself does that.
    And not quite, we were doing leg 2 of the Bob Graham relay (Billy bland relay for those in the know).

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