Never leave the marked trail.
Do not believe anything your phone tells you. Stick to the marked trail.
A couple of years ago a tourist disappeared in a remote part of north western Tasmania. She was young and fit and healthy, she was a seasoned traveller and an experienced hiker. Her car was found in the carpark of a trail heading to a waterfall but there was no other sign of her. The trail is only 1 Km long – just over half a mile, yet she got lost.
Her friends and family have come out to Australia a few times conducting their own searches and they finally had a breakthrough – they found her phone. They haven’t found her body yet but they’re beginning to piece together what must have happened.
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Her last known location was at the waterfall and the carpark was to the south west of her, but her phone was found 600 metres away to the north west, 90 degrees perpendicular to where she should have been heading.
What they now think has happened is that she checked her phone while she was at the waterfall, it was late in a winter’s afternoon, temperatures were below freezing and it was already getting dark.
And Google Maps showed her a shortcut.
That’s only a part of the problem though. Australia’s a huge country and sparsely populated so we don’t have mobile phone infrastructure everywhere. 85% of Australia’s land mass has no mobile phone coverage. Instead of wide coverage we have small hotspots here and there where they’re needed, and we install them in some tourist places too so that people can take a picture and send it to their friends. Walk too far away from that transponder and you have no mobile access.I have worked in that region of Tasmania
So it’s looking like she started to follow a “shortcut” marked by Google Maps but the moment she moved away from the waterfall she lost access to Google Maps. It’s almost impossible to navigate in deep forests, constant dodging and weaving around trees and other obstacles makes you lose all sense of direction.
Tasmania Police to join renewed search for missing tourist Celine Cremer
Trust Aussies to always lay the easiest and quickest paths possible, we’re genuinely lazy bastards at heart and couldn’t imagine doing it any other way.
Never trust Google Maps.