Solo hiking removes the built-in safety net of a partner who can go for help. A satellite communicator restores that safety net by providing an emergency channel and allowing contacts to monitor progress remotely.
The Three-Part Solo Safety System
- 1
Leave a detailed trip plan
A trip plan left with a trusted contact (not just a general post on social media) specifies: trailhead name and location, planned route, expected return time, and explicit instructions for when to call search and rescue if no check-in has occurred. The satellite communicator is the primary safety tool; the trip plan is the backup if the device fails.
- 2
Share a live tracking link
Garmin's MapShare, Zoleo's tracking page, and SPOT's shared tracking page all provide a URL that a trusted contact can open in any browser to see real-time location updates. Share this link before departure. The contact doesn't need a satellite communicator to monitor progress — just the URL and a browser.
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Schedule check-in messages
A scheduled check-in message — "at camp, all fine" or similar — sent each evening gives contacts confidence that no news is silence, not an emergency. Failing to send a scheduled check-in is the contact's trigger to start the rescue process. Most satellite communicator apps support preset messages that can be sent with one button press.
Recommended Tracking Intervals
| Scenario | Tracking Interval | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Active hiking | 10 min | Good resolution for rescue; manageable battery drain |
| Camp / stationary | 30-60 min | Reduces battery use during rest periods |
| Emergency / SOS active | Continuous | Device transmits as often as possible after SOS |
| Multi-day battery saving | Garmin Expedition mode | Transmits every 10 min in low-power mode |