How to cross rivers or streams at night or in darkness?
I am preparing a dayhike with some buddies of mine but to get to the trailhead, we have to cross more than ten river crossings which are passable by huge vehicles. The water there is quite fast and raging. In the interest of time so we could be able to complete the hike in a single day, I'm planning to start the hike early so we can be at the trailhead before the sun rises. What things should I keep in mind?
This post was sourced from https://outdoors.stackexchange.com/q/15123. It is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.
3 answers
Don't, unless you know the route very well and are sure the rivers can pose no danger.
Travel the day before so you arrive to the trailhead before it gets dark, then spend the night at the trailhead. Big river crossings at night are too dangerous. A headlight will only do so much as the light will just reflect off the surface. You won't be able to tell the depth of the river.
Travelling the afternoon the day before has the added advantage that you will do the river crossings in the afternoon, minimising the risk that swelling river levels trap you on the far side of the river.
This post was sourced from https://outdoors.stackexchange.com/a/15127. It is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.
0 comment threads
A couple problems
- Not in a good position to access the danger and you have not done the route.
- If someone does fall rescue is now much more difficult. You don't even know which side they got out on or how far. You would need to split your party in the dark. Even with a successful rescue you have lost hours and will not make trail head at dawn.
If you know someone that has done the route recently to tell no problems then OK. Fast water above your knees in the dark is not a good combination.
This post was sourced from https://outdoors.stackexchange.com/a/15131. It is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.
0 comment threads
There are a couple of things you will want to do.
- Headlamps are essential as you will want the full use of both of your arms.
- The darkness will make it more difficult, mostly because you be able to see much less.
- The darkness can also mess with your judgement of how far things are.
- In mountainous areas, the stream levels will usually go up later in the day once the snow starts melting, so something that is barely possible at dawn will probably not be possible at noon.
- There will also be an added level of danger because of the added difficulty of getting warm if you fall in (no sunlight to warm you up).
Beyond these all of the standard precautions apply.
Personally, I wouldn't say that this is an automatic turnaround, but there is an added level of danger when river crossing at night.
0 comment threads