Maura Murray

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#18467
Apr 9, 2012
 

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Uh oh. Someone is trying to hurt my feelings with peanuts and red x's again. Guess I'll be crying myself to sleep tonight again.

Bill

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#18468
Apr 9, 2012
 

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whiston wrote:
Hi all. diesel fumes from 2 school buses over who knows how many years being stoppped and backed into the driveway WOULD hinder a search dog.I have seen many articles about this very problem where the dog handler asks that all vehicles be turned off when the search dogs arrive to start the search.I am asssuming the buses at the Atwood residence were diesel.take care philip
Again, I have seen and read articles saying it will, and other saying it won't. I don't know. I will keep diesel engines out of the area or turned off if I think I will be calling in dogs but the handlers say it doesn't matter, but those same handlers then ask that the engine not be in the area. Go figure.

The articles on the subject I have read have stated that the problem is it saturates their olfactory senses making it impossible for them to follow the scent. Again, I don't know. I am only reporting the contradictory responses that I hear in the dog community itself.

Bill
hannah_b

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#18469
Apr 9, 2012
 

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whiston wrote:
Hi all. diesel fumes from 2 school buses over who knows how many years being stoppped and backed into the driveway WOULD hinder a search dog.I have seen many articles about this very problem where the dog handler asks that all vehicles be turned off when the search dogs arrive to start the search.I am asssuming the buses at the Atwood residence were diesel.take care philip
Wrong. That is just an example of a handler that doesn´t trust the dog. Fumes from gas or diesel is not a problem to the dog. Diesel cars are the most sold vehicles in Europe, and parking lots are actually a recommended place to start training a young puppy. I have done this plenty of times over many many years. The dog even goes straight through a puddle of oil.
hannah_b

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#18470
Apr 9, 2012
 

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WTH-the-original wrote:
<quoted text>
Again, I have seen and read articles saying it will, and other saying it won't. I don't know. I will keep diesel engines out of the area or turned off if I think I will be calling in dogs but the handlers say it doesn't matter, but those same handlers then ask that the engine not be in the area. Go figure.
The articles on the subject I have read have stated that the problem is it saturates their olfactory senses making it impossible for them to follow the scent. Again, I don't know. I am only reporting the contradictory responses that I hear in the dog community itself.
Bill
What use would a dog be in a disaster area or war zone if it were stopped by diesel. Drug smugglers would have the easiest job in the world if this was the case. There has been cases where people tried to smuggle drugs in the tank of a vehicle.Didn´t stop the dog from detecting it.
hannah_b

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#18471
Apr 9, 2012
 

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If I was to do tracking in an area with turned on diesel engines I would ask for engines to be turned off too. Not b/c the dog would have a problem, but b/c breathing diesel fumes causes headaches and nausea in humans.
Jenkins

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#18472
Apr 9, 2012
 

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So bill I take it by no response to the question that it was early spring? I suspect the end of march/beginning of April judging by how many people yor describing on the mt and the snow depth.

Oh yes and "postholing" through 1' of snow isn't called post holing, it's called walking through snow that isn't deep.

Every time u climb a mountain in the spring u see idiots like that, but that's completely different than girl by herself in the beginning of February.

Your comparing a beautiful day in the spring where everyone goes up the mt, to a freezing winter night when nobody goes into the woods.
Those same guys would not be out in February.

& I don't doubt they weren't much older than Maura, college guys do retarded shot.
Were any of them girls dressed like that?
That I've never seen
Jenkins

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#18473
Apr 9, 2012
 

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I agree her motivation was to get away from the scene.
But unless her motivation was suicide then I dint believe she is deep in those woods.

Anyone would know going into those woods would be a suicide mission.
Unless she was really motivated to kill herself ten why have motivation to go deep into the woods? There's just no other way, if u believe she might b deep In the woods u mist believe she was suicidal.

Since: Nov 08

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#18474
Apr 9, 2012
 

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Jenkins wrote:
Oh yes and "postholing" through 1' of snow isn't called post holing, it's called walking through snow that isn't deep.
I love it. The more you speak, it shows the less you know.

By definition, what they were doing is called postholing.

Web definitions:

Hiking through deep snow that is not frozen solidly enough to support your weight and allows your leg to drive through the crust as if you’ve stepped into a hole, doing really nasty things to your knees and shins.

www.adventurematters.com/infoglossary.htm

And Maura may have been light enough and the crust heavy enough that she wouldn't have broken through at all. But, please, continue to post. It does nothing but support my case.

We already have you agreeing that her shoes didn't determine if she walked off into the woods.

I am tied up right now, so I can't continue watching you agree with my statements. I'll try to come back after work if possible.

Like I said, it has been a fascinating study so far.

Bill
Jenkins

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#18475
Apr 9, 2012
 

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Dogs def can track with diesel in the air, but it's
Obviously not ideal.
Diesel smell permeates the area an does make it more difficult for the dog to pick up the scent, which is an extremely trace smell.
If it is at all possible it is best if all diesel engines r removed.

Also it's bad for the dog's nose, prolonged exposure to diesel fuel makes their noses
Less sensitive. This is a Problem for dogs worming the border checking trucks for contraband.
Dogs who work in diesel rich environments have a shorter working life than one who works in the woods.

So they def can track when theres diesel in the air, but this is not an ideal condition for tracking.
I think that's why there's so much conflicting info on the subject. Any dog can do it, but there's
Many handlers who won't let their dog search an area that jas diesel fumes bc they're worried about hurting their dogs nose or health.
Jenkins

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#18476
Apr 9, 2012
 

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This is hilarIous bill, you said in your previous post the snow was a foot deep.
That's hardly post holing. I guess u could technically say that but an experienced outdoor person would call that walking through the snow.
How is 1' of snow going to hurt your knees?
It would barely hurt your shins as 1' snow u don't even sink deeper than like 6" bc the snow compacts.

Maura was about 120lbs, more than enough the break through any crust.
When I was 10 and weighed 80lbs there was no crust that could support me.

The only snow that's crusty enough to walk on without breaking through is snow that isn't deep, like 8"-10" absolute max. & that's the kind of snow u would find in the spring, not February.

So you honestly think Maura couldve postholed miles into the woods? Come on
You don't actually believe what your trying to say right?

I'm sorry but anyone who actually knows Nh in the winter would Agee with me, there is absolutely no way she made it anywhere deep into those woods.

That eliminates the need for a giant wilderness search.

She is not going to be found in those woods
Lincolnite

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#18477
Apr 9, 2012
 

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Jenkins wrote:
<quoted text>
& exactly what time of year was this?
Sounds to me like late march or early april judging by the lack of snow one the ground and the fact that people r hiking the mountain.
Nobody hikes mountains in February in Nh, well nobody except the most hardy winter mountaineers.
Also your talking about daytime, nice weather with clearly at least a few groups of people.
Completely different than a 21yr old girl alone in the Dark of night in feb in Nh, the comparison your making here is absurd.
Go to mt Washington at the beginning of April and u see the same thing. Only thing is 99% of the trail is trampled down into a relatively hard surface and it really doesn't matter what shoes u r wearing.
Nothing at all like trailblazing your own new trail, through2' of snow in the middle of the woods all by yourself in the beginning of febraury.
If u think those same guys u saw climbing mt Adams in spring when there's clearly groups of people climbing the mt wouldn't turn back if they were all by themselves and it was 8-9 at night im february, your sorely mistaken.
Nobody's saying that u can't walk through snow with the wrong shoes, u clearly can.
But what's the likelihood a 21 yr old girl, wearing tiny sneakers, through 2' of snow, at 9pm in February is gonna keep going far into the woods?
None unless she was suicidal.
Bill you must think she was suicidal right?
What your describing is clearly a suicide mission to anyone kno knows anything about hiking in the north country. & I suspect Maura knew at least that much, she was an avid reader of not without peril, which in reality is more about NOT dying than dying.
It's not true that no one except the most hardy mountaineers climb the NH mountains in the winter. Off the top of my head just this past Feb. there were two separate rescues on Mount Lafayette in Franconia.The second rescue was for a 35 yr old woman from MA hiking alone. And there was no lack of other winter rescues. Just go to the trailheads in Lincoln, Franconia, North Conway and other places known for hiking and see the cars parked at the trailheads. All those people are hiking. All winter long. Many of these rescues are for hikers that are ill prepared and under clothed for the conditions and some because they haven't turned back in time to beat the darkness. NH is known for winter hiking and it is a very popular sport.
Lincolnite

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#18478
Apr 9, 2012
 

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Jenkins wrote:
This is hilarIous bill, you said in your previous post the snow was a foot deep.
That's hardly post holing. I guess u could technically say that but an experienced outdoor person would call that walking through the snow.
How is 1' of snow going to hurt your knees?
It would barely hurt your shins as 1' snow u don't even sink deeper than like 6" bc the snow compacts.
Maura was about 120lbs, more than enough the break through any crust.
When I was 10 and weighed 80lbs there was no crust that could support me.
The only snow that's crusty enough to walk on without breaking through is snow that isn't deep, like 8"-10" absolute max. & that's the kind of snow u would find in the spring, not February.
So you honestly think Maura couldve postholed miles into the woods? Come on
You don't actually believe what your trying to say right?
I'm sorry but anyone who actually knows Nh in the winter would Agee with me, there is absolutely no way she made it anywhere deep into those woods.
That eliminates the need for a giant wilderness search.
She is not going to be found in those woods
The snowbanks on the sides of the road may be deep but there is much less snow in the woods. While it may have snowed 12 inches in open areas, under the pines and thickly treed woods there is much less snow.It would not be hard to walk into the woods if someone really wanted to.
Lincolnite

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#18479
Apr 9, 2012
 

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Jenkins wrote:
<quoted text>
I def wouldn't say it's confirmed she was wearing flats, it appears that she was but I also recall people on the orig mm forum saying that she was wearing those sneakers that look like hiking boots, but they're low and def not boots at all.
Either way we know she wasn't prepared for being in the woods during the winter in Nh. Theresa absolutely no way she was planning on going deep into the woods to drink herself to death, that's just ridiculous. What's she gonna do just go trouncing through 2' of snow in her sneakers and jeans with no gloves & climb to the top of a mountain? There's no trails open to the tops of mountains in Nh in winter, well nothing even approaching easy to climb. It's serious life or death, climb at yur own risk type shit. U would need serious gear to make it up a mountain in feb. What would be the fun of drinking yourself to death on top of a mountain, if u can't make it to the top Of the mountain? Remember this is a girl who brought beers to celebrate at the top of mt Mansfield(i think it was mansfield) Great mountain to hike but certainly not difficult by any means..If she thought this was an accomplishment worthy of celebration she clearly wasn't an expert mountaineer by any means. Not to put her down at all I hike the same mountains she did and consider it an achievement every time, but I'm also not an expert who can climb mountains in the dead of winter or have any interest in doing anything that difficult.
The fact is that she couldn't have made it far into those woods. Those shoes and jeans & no gloves, no way. There's so many spots along 112 u can't even enter the woods, like across the river. Can't cross it. No way in hell. In summer it's a big stream, in winter that thing is a raging river that's half really weak, clear kind of ice, and the other half water. Anyone trying to cross this in winter is going to die. To get down to the river there's about a 15-20' incline that's so steep it's ridiculous. No way ur just walking down it.
Jenkins I live in the Lincoln area and work in VT so I drive along 112 every day. I have to ask why you think the Wild Ammonoosuc can't be crossed. There is a pretty steep bank just beyond BHR for a short distance and then it pretty much evens out. There are some camps that have chairs set up just a couple feet from the water in the summer not very far from BHR. The gun club on 112 fairly close to BHR is next to the river and the children fish there. No banks along that whole stretch of road.
I've fished that river from N. Woodstock to Bath and know most of the fishing holes. While they may be deep enough for the fish to pool up most of the river in the summer is anywhere from ankle deep to knee deep in most spots with some areas a little deeper. Winter the water is also shallow and unless someone fell and hit there head on a rock it would be pretty hard to find a place deep enough to fall into and drown. Now I'm talking about the area from BHR to approximately the Wildwood Campground. There is plenty of places where the river can be crossed and to say that whoever crosses the river is going to die is most certainly not true.
The only time I've seen it turn into a raging river is during Irene, when an icejam breaks above and sends the ice and water downstream or when it rains for days in the mountains.
May I suggest that you take a ride in the summer and some day in Feb and actually see for yourself how much water is really in the river and how easy it would be to cross it.
Jenkins

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#18480
Apr 9, 2012
 

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Ok first of all the river in the summer is completely different than in the winter.
In summer it's little more than a brook, in winter it's a raging river that cannot b crossed easily.
Not saying there isn't a spot u can cross but I sure haven't seen one. I looked and looked back in 04 and crossing that river between feb and April is a suicide mission.
Since your from Lincoln maybe u could tell me where u would b able tocross it in winter, remember that ice on rivers like this does not freeze solid enough to walk on.

Funny that u say u drive 112 every day but you didnt know 112 crossed kinsman notch, how's that possible? I drove it 1-2 times a week about 5-6 years ago & I remember that.

If u really drive that road every day how could u possibly have thought I was talking about Franconia notch?
Jenkins

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#18481
Apr 9, 2012
 

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Thinking about it there aren't even that many places u can safely get down to the river even in smear. Most of the road that runs along the river there's like a 10-20' hill that's wicked steep going down to the river.
In winter add a 6' snowbank and ice to the equation and again, only someone on a suicide mission would try to do this
citigirl

Fall River, MA

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#18482
Apr 9, 2012
 

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Jenkins wrote:
This is hilarIous bill, you said in your previous post the snow was a foot deep.
That's hardly post holing. I guess u could technically say that but an experienced outdoor person would call that walking through the snow.
How is 1' of snow going to hurt your knees?
It would barely hurt your shins as 1' snow u don't even sink deeper than like 6" bc the snow compacts.
Maura was about 120lbs, more than enough the break through any crust.
When I was 10 and weighed 80lbs there was no crust that could support me.
The only snow that's crusty enough to walk on without breaking through is snow that isn't deep, like 8"-10" absolute max. & that's the kind of snow u would find in the spring, not February.
So you honestly think Maura couldve postholed miles into the woods? Come on
You don't actually believe what your trying to say right?
I'm sorry but anyone who actually knows Nh in the winter would Agee with me, there is absolutely no way she made it anywhere deep into those woods.
That eliminates the need for a giant wilderness search.
She is not going to be found in those woods
Sorry Jenkins but I have to disagree with you. I weigh 130 and when walking on crust snow I never left any footprints and never broke through the snow in specific areas. If anything ever happened to me in these areas there were no visible tracks left behind by me to let others know I was in these areas. I kept sliding and ended up deeper into the woods than I wanted to go. Thank God I was not alone because we helped one another.
Jenkins

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#18483
Apr 9, 2012
 

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WTH-the-original wrote:
<quoted text>
I love it. The more you speak, it shows the less you know.
By definition, what they were doing is called postholing.
Web definitions:
Hiking through deep snow that is not frozen solidly enough to support your weight and allows your leg to drive through the crust as if you’ve stepped into a hole, doing really nasty things to your knees and shins.
www.adventurematters.com/infoglossary.htm
And Maura may have been light enough and the crust heavy enough that she wouldn't have broken through at all. But, please, continue to post. It does nothing but support my case.
We already have you agreeing that her shoes didn't determine if she walked off into the woods.
I am tied up right now, so I can't continue watching you agree with my statements. I'll try to come back after work if possible.
Like I said, it has been a fascinating study so far.
Bill
Your hardly provin anything here bill, think it all u want but our certainly not convincing anyone of anything.

That may n the Internet definition but u do not use the term postholing in a foot of snow, generally it's cristy snow over like 2'

Go out with some experienced outdoors people and use that term in a foot of snow, you'd get laughed off the mountain as an amateur, which you clearly r in respect to winter mountaineering.
Jenkins

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#18484
Apr 9, 2012
 

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citigirl wrote:
<quoted text>Sorry Jenkins but I have to disagree with you. I weigh 130 and when walking on crust snow I never left any footprints and never broke through the snow in specific areas. If anything ever happened to me in these areas there were no visible tracks left behind by me to let others know I was in these areas. I kept sliding and ended up deeper into the woods than I wanted to go. Thank God I was not alone because we helped one another.
Citi I'm not doubting what your saying but I went over this.
U didn't arrive until march 16th, most of the snow had melted by then and was under a foot.
Snow that's under a foot, has been compresse by the snowpack and now frozen solid can be walked on.

Completely different than February when there's 2' of snow on the ground.

Do u think Maura could've walked deep into the woods that night throug all that snow?
Do u think she would've?
Do u think she was suicidal?
Lincolnite

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#18485
Apr 9, 2012
 

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Jenkins wrote:
Ok first of all the river in the summer is completely different than in the winter.
In summer it's little more than a brook, in winter it's a raging river that cannot b crossed easily.
Not saying there isn't a spot u can cross but I sure haven't seen one. I looked and looked back in 04 and crossing that river between feb and April is a suicide mission.
Since your from Lincoln maybe u could tell me where u would b able tocross it in winter, remember that ice on rivers like this does not freeze solid enough to walk on.
Funny that u say u drive 112 every day but you didnt know 112 crossed kinsman notch, how's that possible? I drove it 1-2 times a week about 5-6 years ago & I remember that.
If u really drive that road every day how could u possibly have thought I was talking about Franconia notch?
The local weather on tv refers at times to snow, freezing rain and so forth north or south of the "Notch" also known as the Franconia Notch.. When the Notch is mentioned among anyone up here it is not Kinsmans Notch that comes to mind. It is Franconia Notch also know as "The Notch".
That part of 112 that goes through Kinsmans Notch is known as Lost River and Lost River Mountain. When there's an accident on that stretch of road the police aren't sent to Kinsmans Notch, they are sent to 112 Lost River.
If you ever get lost in the 112 area don't call for help and say that you're in the notch because they will be looking for you in Franconia.
I really don't like arguing with someone from out of state that thinks they know the area but I must say again that you are wrong on what you are saying.
The river is not a raging river in the winter and impossible to cross except for those exceptions that I posted previously.
You can cross by the first few camps on the right that have made a picnic area across the road on the river, you can cross by the gun club, theres a nice place a little further where you can drive in (if its not plowed in) and the river is very easy to walk across. While there are some banks Jenkins there are many flat places where it's very easy just to walk across the river. There is not a lot of water in the river in the winter.
Where were you looking when it looked like a suicide mission to cross?
Shack

Groton, MA

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#18486
Apr 9, 2012
 

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I don't think a hiker would start a trek at 8PM...(never mind it being February)in NH

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