Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Left in Wilds, Man Penned Dying Record

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Left in Wilds, Man Penned Dying Record

    The story of Carl McCunn.


    What a shitty way to go. Not quite as retarded as Christopher McCandless (aka. Alexander Supertramp), but still fucking stupid. I love the outdoors as much as anyone, and I wont even do day hikes in the mountains without telling people where we're going, when we're returning, etc.


    He actually wrote in his diary:
    "I think I should have used more foresight about arranging my departure."





    (BTW, this article was written in 1982... his ordeal happened in the summer/fall of 1981)

    Left in Wilds, Man Penned Dying Record

    FAIRBANKS, Alaska, Dec. 18— Tales of death and despair in the frozen north are not new in Alaskan folklore, but seldom have men recorded their own fatal adventure as graphically as Carl McCunn, a photographer of wildlife.

    When a state trooper cut open the tent and found Mr. McCunn's wasted body last Feb. 2, he also found a diary the starving man had kept until he ended his suffering with a rifle bullet.

    ''They say it doesn't hurt,'' the 35-year-old Mr. McCunn wrote before he pulled the trigger. He died in a wilderness camp near a nameless lake in a nameless valley 225 miles northeast of Fairbanks. He had gone there to photograph the tundra. But he had not been specific about plans to be flown out, and so he was stranded and ran out of food.

    His diary, 100 pages of looseleaf paper, began in tidy, block letters recording the wonders of an emerging summer. It ended, eight and a half months later, in the scrawl of an abandoned soul crippled by frostbite, scavenging the half-eaten prey of foxes.


    Tale From Coroner's Office
    The diary wound up in the coroner's office here, where, at an inquest, the plight of Mr. McCunn unfolded. On the last page, he wrote: ''Am burning the last of my emergency Coleman light and just fed the fire the last of my split wood. When the ashes cool, I'll be cooling along with them.''

    Mr. McCunn had been flown into the valley in March 1981 as winter was ending. He knew the area. In 1976, he had spent five months alone in the desolate Brooks Range.

    This time, with about 500 rolls of film, photography equipment, firearms and 1,400 pounds of provisions, he had planned to stay through mid-August.

    His father, Donovan McCunn of San Antonio, Tex., described his son as 6 feet, 2 inches tall, weighing 240 pounds, with curly, reddish blond hair and an outgoing personality. He was born in West Germany to an Army family.


    Four Years in the Navy
    After high school, he went to college for a semester before joining the Navy for a four-year tour. Then he worked on a ferry between Washington State and Alaska and did odd jobs after making his home in Alaska, probably in 1970.

    At the coroner's inquest, testimony from friends and notes from Mr. McCunn's diary suggested that he had failed to make specific arrangements to be picked up. The coroner's jury ruled his death a suicide.

    In early diary entries, he wrote of the return of the animals to their summer grounds and commented, ''Humans are so out of their 'modern-day' element in a place like this.''

    By early August, with his supplies dwindling, his concern grew. ''I think I should have used more foresight about arranging my departure,'' he wrote. ''I'll soon find out.''

    By mid-August his diary entries were not dated; he spent much of his time searching for food, shooting some ducks and muskrats and drying the meat of a caribou that died in the lake. His anxiety grew.

    He wrote: ''Come on, please. Don't leave me hangin' and frettin' like this. I didn't come out here for that.'' Meanwhile, concerned friends asked the Alaska State Troopers to check on Mr. McCunn. Trooper David Hamilton flew over Mr. McCunn's camp. He testified that he had seen Mr. McCunn waving a red bag. He said he circled, and Mr. McCunn ''waved in a casual manner and watched us fly by.''

    ''On the third pass he turned and walked back toward the tent, slowly, casually,'' Mr. Hamilton said. ''We surmised there was no immediate danger or need for emergency aid.''


    Realized He Gave Wrong Signal
    In his diary, Mr. McCunn tells of being elated on sighting the plane, then realizing that he had given the wrong signal to the pilot.

    ''I recall raising my right hand, shoulder high and shaking my fist on the plane's second pass. It was a little cheer - like when your team scored a touchdown or something.

    ''Turns out that's the signal for 'ALL O.K. DO NOT WAIT!' Man, I can't believe it!'' Snow came and the lake froze over. He saw his first wolf, ''like a giant husky,'' tried to shoot it with his .22 and heard it yelp. But it crashed away into the underbrush. ''Bad shot and bad show of patience,'' he wrote.

    By October, he was competing with wolves and foxes for the rabbits he snared. From the diary: ''It's been a terrible day for me and I won't go into it. Hands getting more frostbitten every day. Have only one meal of beans left. Honestly, I'm scared for my life. But I won't give up.''

    In November, Mr. McCunn ran out of food. He considered trying to reach Fort Yukon on foot, 75 miles away. He wrote a letter to his father, telling him how to develop his film. He caught a squirrel, ''but that's only a tease even when you chew up and swallow all the bones too.''

    Around Thanksgiving, he began having dizzy spells. ''I feel miserable,'' he wrote. ''Have had the chills upon awakening for the past three days. I can't take much more of this. Can't stop thinking about using the bullet.''

    He used the last of his fuel, fed the fire a final time and wrote: ''Dear God in Heaven, please forgive me my weakness and my sins. Please look over my family.'' He added a separate note asking that his personal items be returned to his father, and he said that the person who found him should keep his rifle and shotgun. He signed his name and attached his Alaska driver's license. ''The I.D. is me, natch,'' he said in the diary's last entry.

    Last edited by Strychnine; 12-29-2011, 12:23 PM.

  • #2
    Idiot. Same goes for Supertramp. Idealism is fantastic until you pay for it with your life because of lack of planning and knowledge.

    Comment


    • #3
      I can't imagine everything that goes through a mans head in that kind of situation.

      I would have shot myself for the stupidity of giving the wrong signal.

      Comment


      • #4
        Kinda like the handless wonder here in Texas. Sad story, but his own stupidity got the best of him. Would like to see the photographs.
        How do we forget ourselves? How do we forget our minds?

        Comment


        • #5
          McCandless was the perfect example of an unprepared beatnik getting in over his head. He died of starvation 8 miles from a freeway. What a fucking moron. It just goes to show how people can idolize fucking morons.
          "When the people find that they can vote themselves money, that will herald the end of the republic." -Benjamin Franklin
          "A democracy will continue to exist up until the time that voters discover that they can vote themselves generous gifts from the public treasury." -Alexander Fraser Tytler

          Comment


          • #6
            Originally posted by talisman View Post
            Idiot. Same goes for Supertramp. Idealism is fantastic until you pay for it with your life because of lack of planning and knowledge.

            Truth.

            Knowledge can go a long way. See: Dick Proenneke

            The original Survivorman. He even videoed some of his stuff, and this was back in the 70s. The fucker built his own log cabin, made his own tools, etc and he did it all at age 50+.




            On May 21, 1968, Proenneke arrived at his new place of retirement at Twin Lakes. Before arriving at the lakes, he made arrangements to use a cabin on the upper lake of Twin Lakes owned by a retired Navy captain, Spike Carrithers, and his wife Hope from Kodiak, (in whose care he had left his camper). This cabin was well situated on the lake and close to the site which Proenneke chose for the construction of his own cabin. Proenneke's bush pilot friend, Babe Alsworth, returned occasionally to bring food and orders that Proenneke placed through him to Sears.

            Proenneke remained at Twin Lakes for the next 16 months, when he left to go home for a time to visit relatives and secure more supplies. He returned to the lakes in the following spring and remained there for most of the next 30 years, going to the lower 48 only occasionally to be with his family. He made a film record of his solitary life, which was later recut and made into a documentary, entitled Alone in the Wilderness. It has aired on PBS numerous times. In 2011, a sequel was produced after it was revealed Proenneke had shot enough footage for at least two more programs






            Comment


            • #7
              Originally posted by Strychnine View Post
              He saw his first wolf, ''like a giant husky,'' tried to shoot it with his .22 and heard it yelp. But it crashed away into the underbrush. ''Bad shot and bad show of patience,'' he wrote.
              The same mistake made by McCandless. You're in the Alaskan wilderness, where animals are over 1,000lbs, and distances are regularly 1,000 yards. The weapon both of these dead idiots chose? A .22LR. If I was heading out there, I'd have a .44 magnum revolver, a .300 mag bolt action, and an AR-10. All with optics.
              "When the people find that they can vote themselves money, that will herald the end of the republic." -Benjamin Franklin
              "A democracy will continue to exist up until the time that voters discover that they can vote themselves generous gifts from the public treasury." -Alexander Fraser Tytler

              Comment


              • #8
                Originally posted by 5.0_CJ View Post
                The same mistake made by McCandless. You're in the Alaskan wilderness, where animals are over 1,000lbs, and distances are regularly 1,000 yards. The weapon both of these dead idiots chose? A .22LR. If I was heading out there, I'd have a .44 magnum revolver, a .300 mag bolt action, and an AR-10. All with optics.
                I dont know what all those things are you just said, but if it will stop a bear, I will take 3 please.

                Comment


                • #9
                  Originally posted by mstng86 View Post
                  I dont know what all those things are you just said, but if it will stop a bear, I will take 3 please.


                  Both of these geniuses felt the round on the far right was sufficient for the Alaskan wilderness. The only thing you can kill with this is rabbits and squirrels. And both of those are too lean to sustain life. You can eat it daily and still starve to death.
                  "When the people find that they can vote themselves money, that will herald the end of the republic." -Benjamin Franklin
                  "A democracy will continue to exist up until the time that voters discover that they can vote themselves generous gifts from the public treasury." -Alexander Fraser Tytler

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    I remember when I watched Into the Wild I kind of thought the guy was a dick the whole film, then when he bought it at the end I was like "I just wasted two hours watching the life story of a total fucking idiot." it started off good, fuck the system and all that, but Jesus. These guys should have paid attention to Hannible on the A Team.

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Originally posted by 5.0_CJ View Post
                      Both of these geniuses felt the round on the far right was sufficient for the Alaskan wilderness. The only thing you can kill with this is rabbits and squirrels. And both of those are too lean to sustain life. You can eat it daily and still starve to death.
                      I have held one of those bullets on the far right before. I thought it would only kill a bird or a rat, and I knew nothing about guns at the time.

                      Morons.

                      I still need to educate myself on guns.
                      Last edited by mstng86; 12-29-2011, 11:37 AM.

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Originally posted by mstng86 View Post
                        I have held one of those bullets on the far right before. I thought it would only kill a bird or a rat, and I knew nothing about guns at the time.

                        Morons.

                        I need still need to educate myself on guns.
                        It's funny that the two rightmost cartridges use the same diameter bullets. One of them has a little more bang, though.
                        Originally posted by Broncojohnny
                        HOORAY ME and FUCK YOU!

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Originally posted by talisman View Post
                          I remember when I watched Into the Wild I kind of thought the guy was a dick the whole film, then when he bought it at the end I was like "I just wasted two hours watching the life story of a total fucking idiot." it started off good, fuck the system and all that, but Jesus. These guys should have paid attention to Hannible on the A Team.
                          It's classic Sean Penn to make a movie about a moron beatnik. He leaves out all of the pertinent stuff, and adds in his own bullshit in an attempt to make him out to be the victim. In the movie he makes it appear McCandless died of being poisioned by some berries. He wasn't poisoned. Medical examiners went through everything he ate, no poison in anything. He simple starved to death like an idiot. And the best part? A highway was within an hours walk. He was so ill prepared he didn't even have a damn map.
                          "When the people find that they can vote themselves money, that will herald the end of the republic." -Benjamin Franklin
                          "A democracy will continue to exist up until the time that voters discover that they can vote themselves generous gifts from the public treasury." -Alexander Fraser Tytler

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Originally posted by Nash B. View Post
                            It's funny that the two rightmost cartridges use the same diameter bullets. One of them has a little more bang, though.
                            Yep, it's amazing what 2,000 additional feet per second will do.
                            "When the people find that they can vote themselves money, that will herald the end of the republic." -Benjamin Franklin
                            "A democracy will continue to exist up until the time that voters discover that they can vote themselves generous gifts from the public treasury." -Alexander Fraser Tytler

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Originally posted by 5.0_CJ View Post


                              Both of these geniuses felt the round on the far right was sufficient for the Alaskan wilderness. The only thing you can kill with this is rabbits and squirrels. And both of those are too lean to sustain life. You can eat it daily and still starve to death.
                              give me the one on the far left

                              Comment

                              Working...
                              X