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Lost: On a Mountain in Maine

This blog is neither about: 1) the culmination of one of the most talked about TV shows ever, or 2) a classic survival story about a young boy missing on Mount Katahdin. It’s about a hiking hat. A hiking hat lost on a trail in Maine.

I am completely responsible for losing said hat on Thursday (if you’re curious, it was a Tilley with Insect Shield I was testing). I wore it while hiking up Mount Blue, but after my kid, from her perch in the child carrier, yanked it off my head for the umpteenth time, waved it in my sweaty face, then dropped it, I lashed it onto the kid carrier, where it stayed securely all the way up the mountain and some unknown distance partway down the mountain. Sadly, once we returned to the trailhead, it was gone.

We ran back up the trail a ways; no hat. I came back and hiked the trail again today; no hat. I called the State Park office; no hat (though the lady I spoke with sounded genuinely sorry for me; I reassured her that I would be okay).

While it was a very nice hat (and I can report that the Insect Shield does work!), it was not an item of great personal value, nor was it irreplaceable (if it had been my grubby Trailspace hat, that would have been another story). It’s my own fault for losing it. What bugs me is that someone came across a practically-brand-new hat on the trail, a hat that was not theirs, and decided to keep it.

The rules for dealing with lost items on the trail seem to be unwritten and situations can be highly variable and require a judgment call. So, here are my own basic suggestions for obviously lost gear:

This is the first piece of gear I can recall personally losing (we won’t count the ice axe a friend left in the snow on the top of Mount Washington). So I’ve had a good run. But, I can’t help thinking that there is someone out there hiking around with a size-7 3/8 hiking hat that doesn’t belong to him or her. I’d like to imagine it’s a raccoon or moose enjoying a reprieve from Maine’s black flies and mosquitoes.

Originally published May 23, 2010, on Trailspace

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