Rising water alert device for river camping
Posted: Thu Dec 16, 2010 10:00 pm
We talked about devices like this back when one of our own nearly got caught on a gravel bar by rising water at night while solo tripping when it rained a lot up stream on the Buffalo. Alan survived thanks to his faithfull and wonderful dog Coochie waking him.
I was in Home Depot tonight and bought one for $19.95 - a Water Detector Alert by Doberman Security. Uses 2AAA batteries, and has a 100 decibel alarm. It is about 3"x1.5"x1" and weighs about 4 ounces, so it is not something too big or too heavy to use, and at $20 it would make a good stocking stuffer for Christmas for someone you do not want washed away. How well it works, probably will depend on how and where you rig it in relation to where you are camped and how fast the river rises, but I thought I would give it a shot.
I plan on carrying mine as group gear when we have water to campout with again. It has an ON-OFF button with a red LED to let you know it is armed. I will try to let the group decide where the alarm is located.. Sensor is about the size of 5 pennies stacked up and it hangs down about a foot or so below the alarm. I'm going to glue some hooks on my alarm so I can rig it where I want, like on a tent stake.
They are made to stick near something that could have rising water or a leak. I will cover mine with a plastic food tub like sour cream comes in, so rain would not set it off, and then stake it/ tie it off, so that rising water would set it off, but not wash it away.
Thought that I remembered some of us saying that we would get one if it was carried locally, and the price was right. I will demonstrate it on our next river campout (well before bedtime) if anyone wants to see what it is like or decide if it is worth getting, or wants to know what to listen for after dark.
And please, no setting it off as a joke after dark. Boy who cryed wolf might get a bucket of water dumped on him or her.
Anybody ever notice where I pitch my tent on our trips - about as far back as the gravel bar goes without climbing the hill. I might still could get washed away, but I'd be among the last to be swimming, rather than the first. So maybe it needs to be below the lowest tent,
Eric Esche
I was in Home Depot tonight and bought one for $19.95 - a Water Detector Alert by Doberman Security. Uses 2AAA batteries, and has a 100 decibel alarm. It is about 3"x1.5"x1" and weighs about 4 ounces, so it is not something too big or too heavy to use, and at $20 it would make a good stocking stuffer for Christmas for someone you do not want washed away. How well it works, probably will depend on how and where you rig it in relation to where you are camped and how fast the river rises, but I thought I would give it a shot.
I plan on carrying mine as group gear when we have water to campout with again. It has an ON-OFF button with a red LED to let you know it is armed. I will try to let the group decide where the alarm is located.. Sensor is about the size of 5 pennies stacked up and it hangs down about a foot or so below the alarm. I'm going to glue some hooks on my alarm so I can rig it where I want, like on a tent stake.
They are made to stick near something that could have rising water or a leak. I will cover mine with a plastic food tub like sour cream comes in, so rain would not set it off, and then stake it/ tie it off, so that rising water would set it off, but not wash it away.
Thought that I remembered some of us saying that we would get one if it was carried locally, and the price was right. I will demonstrate it on our next river campout (well before bedtime) if anyone wants to see what it is like or decide if it is worth getting, or wants to know what to listen for after dark.
And please, no setting it off as a joke after dark. Boy who cryed wolf might get a bucket of water dumped on him or her.
Anybody ever notice where I pitch my tent on our trips - about as far back as the gravel bar goes without climbing the hill. I might still could get washed away, but I'd be among the last to be swimming, rather than the first. So maybe it needs to be below the lowest tent,
Eric Esche