Moving with an emergency/improvised sled has a limited range of snow/terrain use cases that don't result in exhaustingly impossible to move or terrifyingly unsafe experiences for small group rescue. Normally I think in terms of having the ability to drag or low angle lower a few dozen or hundred
feet to safer position or LZ, and that would be a lot of work for one or two people. Tarp/emergency bivy (a decent one, not emergency blanket crap), cordellete, tape, ski straps, webbing, and maybe an axe/rope are what I have to (maybe) do that. It's not something I want as Plan A or B. It's Plan Oh-Fuck-What-Choice-Do-I-Have.
I'd rather shelter and treat in place until a safe and workable means to extricate arrives along with sufficient bodies to accomplish the extrication.
A reasonable nonmotorized backcountry snow extrication team should show with a
carbon/ti akja (40lbs $4300) or
Sked (96x36" 17lbs $700) or
Foxtrot (80x18" 4.5lbs $190) plus some other fun patient packaging depending on the situation (eg full body vaccuum splint and a specialized sleeping bag). Akja is amazing for it's purpose of going down through soft snow. Skeds and Foxtrots drag and lower well over snow and scree, although the latter trades rigidity for portability. Ironically the
OP's toy sled (54"x18" $12) is the closest "emergency sled" to a Foxtrot, but it would naturally drag feet. You could DIY with this 120"x24"x0.07"
HDPE roll for $27.
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