My boys and I headed on down to the creek to catch the families who were ahead. One extra kid walked down with me and my boys and we came to another wall of icicles. We stopped for a few minutes before I prodded them on saying we needed to get to the bottom. As we continued down, there was a section where the trail turned left away from the bluffs and Jack and Isaac and I made the turn and went on down to the bridge where we followed the trail across to the other side where leaf hikers were hanging out.
We played by the creek for about ten minutes before my alarm went off and we had to head back, I expected to catch the group that was already on their way up.
Right before we headed back across the creek I noticed some people on the other side of the bridge coming down the mountain, but when we went to leave, that group wasn't there. I assumed they must have headed back up the trail because they were no longer visible.
As we
headed up (I like to be the last one to leave to make sure we have
everyone and everything), I had a nagging feeling something was off. I
thought I heard kids laughing, but I couldn't tell if it was from kids
ahead of us on the trail or somewhere else. And the one kid who had been
with me and my boys coming down to the creek was no longer with us...
I started yelling ahead on the trail (there was no cell reception) to see if anyone had seen this one kid. The message was eventually relayed all the way to the front. Everyone was over halfway back to the cars when we had confirmation that said kid was not with the group AND there were other kids and one mom missing.
Dun.Dun.Da.
At that point I knew I was heading back to find the rest of the group. I made a decisive plan that everyone needed to continue back to the parking lot immediately. I put another mom in charge of my boys, along with hers, and was very clear that everyone needed to get back to the cars. The sun would be going down soon and standing still on a trail was just going to make everyone cold. Also, I told the mom closest to me to call my husband if we didn't make it back to the trailhead within an hour of everyone else.
I, along with one other mother (who was missing a child) started running back down the trail in the opposite direction. As soon as the plan was in play, I received a text (still no cell reception) from the missing mom asking where everyone was and stating that she had the five missing kids and they were headed toward us.
Cue relief.
I was able to contact the rest of the group via text and then I ran until I had the missing friends in my sight. Thankfully I didn't have to run all the way back to the bottom of the gorge!
Some things that went wrong: the
missing mom and kids were in the middle of the pack and I had no idea
they were coming on down the trail. The missing group had missed where
the trail turned left and went down to the bridge and creek crossing, instead they continued to follow under the bluffs. This was an easy mistake to make: when I was heading back up some of our group almost made the same mistake bearing left when they should have turned right.
I don't expect things to go perfectly on each hike. I am so thankful the missing party remembered what I had told them at the start. I am so thankful no one was truly lost. I am thankful the rest of the group made it back to the cars and happily waited for us. Mistakes happened, but the right things happened as well.
Hopefully we all learned some valuable lessons. That is part of spending time in wild places. And now we have some new stories to tell.
This was the 13th hike for the year, with 4 miles (mostly running) bringing my total miles for this year to 37.5.
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