Lightning season is starting, and it helps to be reminded of how to stay safe from strikes. Here is a quick primer of lightning safety tips.
Lightning Safety is something that we all need to be reminded of, each season.
Lightning evokes more fear in me than anything else in the backcountry. It is amazing how quick those storms appear, especially if they are hidden by a ridge. I had one come over a set of peaks like a dragon, when I was a good half mile above timberline. Me and my dogs ran down along the side of the ridge to treeline. I stayed off the ridge summit because I figured that would be the most likely spot for a lightning strike.
I have sat through some horrendous storms in the mountains, and I am awed by the power and intensity of lightning and thunder. It is particularly impressive to be up there on a dark night, then have a lightning strike brighten the entire mountain range in pulsating ebbs of light. It also is something to be lying in your tent, and feel the entire mountain beneath you vibrate with the thunder.
There is no doubt that wilderness travel can be risky. You just have to use your head and minimize the risk, and realize that danger is part of an active life. To have a rich life, you accept the danger with a level head and a calm disposition, knowing you are up there seeing things that most people never will in a lifetime.
Our first thunder here in Colorado came about three weeks ago, and I am ready to get out and do more living and less talking. Before long I will be shouldering a pack and climbing high to witness the beauty and mystery of the mountains. Up there me and my border collies are about the three happiest creatures on this earth.
More information on lightning safety can be found from NOAA, and a compilation of lightning articles from usatoday.