The Southland Times

The beauty of beacons

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now that the tiny wee devices allow for precise in-and-out rescues. Sure enough, the same day we report that locator beacons are becoming a routine art of the outdoor landscape comes a successful rescue of a father and daughter stranded by the flooded Glaisnock River amid forecast-todeterior­ate conditions. Excellent. And reminiscen­t, surely, of the rescue of a father and son in January last year, stranded on a small island in in the swollen tributary of the Hauroko Burn. We’ve even had the slightly weird case this month of a broken-legged tramper saved in Mount Aspiring National Park by a locator beacon he didn’t have. Amid foul weather an unidentifi­ed woman, not otherwise well prepared, had set hers off after becoming increasing­ly afraid on her own behalf and rescuers, answering that call, had found the man who by that stage had crawled his way back to the track.

It’s foolish-to-fatal to foray into the wilds without having either an owned or hired beacon with you - though it’s simultaneo­usly true that the little beggars don’t then absolve you of your other grownup responsibi­lities. It’s also folly to place excessive reliance on them by failing to carry out the most basic preparatio­ns like having a plan, telling people what it is, and being clear about the rigours the trip may impose on you.

Though the trend is for even the more Crumpian types among us taking beacons with them, and the benefits have been assessed as more than 400 lives saved (and a good deal less pain and fear to be endured in the meantime) there’s still a necessary developmen­t yet to be completed to improve the way the beacons work. As Southland Locator Beacons chairman John Munro says, the change from analogue to digital in 2009 carried benefits of reliabilit­y, but also meant that the ability to activate them remotely was lost. Which is crazy, come those cases where the ACR beacons cannot physically be reached by the person in trouble. Kudos, then, to the beacon trust, to an Otago-based engineer, and to the supportive agencies of the Community Trust of Southland and Venture Southland, for the developmen­t of a feature to restore this capability. It still has perhaps 18 months of commercial testing ahead of it, and is subject to patent office and ACR approval. But it’s a thoroughly good developmen­t in prospect.

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