Taurë-rana wrote:It's apparent that Tassie authorities don't take the idea of carrying PLBs as seriously as NSW - I found this quote from the article interesting:
"Emergency personal locator beacons are available in the Blue Mountains seven days a week from the Echo Point and Glenbrook visitor information centres and the NPWS Heritage Centre at Blackheath during business hours, as well as at Springwood and Katoomba police stations
I think this is a great incentive, but probably should point out that it appears that they only have 20 of them, assuming this is correct:
http://bushwalk.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=21&t=1709&hilit=+plb&p=36928#p36928If everyone bushwalking or canyoning in the Blue Mtns at any one time (that's a
lot of people) suddenly wanted to borrow one it would create a demand exceeding supply problem.
Re the Grand Canyon incident, as Dave Noble pointed out the tourist track through it is closed for 6 months or so. I've walked it many times, most recently just before Christmas. At that stage it was open until "the tunnel", just above the abseil entry point for canyoners, so I had to reverse the route. There were prominent warning signs and a locked gate preventing further access. Usually that walk is a circuit of about 6km with a reasonably steep entry and exit. Since then the entire track has been closed while they work on it. Oddly I was able to walk through one of the main work sites near the canyon floor, negotiating sandstone slabs, bags of cement and so on. In any case it's a very popular, high traffic short walk and not the type of trip that you would usually associate with the need for a PLB. I'd certainly like a dollar for every European backpacker I've encountered on that track over the years. I can't comment on the canyoning aspect but in both cases I have doubts as to how well a PLB signal would get out from there.