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Emergency Bivouac: How to Survive an Unplanned Night on the Mountain

When you can't get down before dark — the skills that keep you alive until morning

1 นาทีในการอ่าน 195 คำ Trail Talk

bivouac/" class="glossary-link" title="Emergency Bivouac">Emergency Bivouac: How to Survive an Unplanned Night on the Mountain

An emergency bivouac can happen to anyone — weather closes in, a route takes longer than expected, or an injury stops progress. This guide covers the decision to stop, site selection, building emergency shelters from available materials, managing hypothermia risk, emergency signaling, and the mental game of surviving an uncomfortable but survivable night.

Introduction

It Can Happen to Anyone

The Decision to Bivouac

When to Stop vs. When to Push On

Daylight Assessment

Energy and Condition Assessment

Site Selection

Wind Protection

Avalanche and Rockfall Safety

Drainage Considerations

Shelter Options

Emergency Bivy Bag

Emergency Blanket

Snow Shelters — Trench and Quinzee

Rock and Natural Shelters

No Equipment — Body Positioning

Hypothermia Prevention

Insulation from the Ground

Layering Strategy

Shared Body Heat

Staying Dry

Food, Water, and Morale

Rationing Emergency Supplies

Melting Snow for Water

Mental Strategies for Long Cold Nights

Signaling for Rescue

Visual and Auditory Signals

Electronic Communication

Morning — Getting Out Safely

คำศัพท์

Whiteout Summit Wind Chill Bivouac Exposure Hypothermia Frostbite

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