
Online, experienced hikers try to explain how easily little errors can snowball into catastrophe, while others declare it’s all down to the missing people wandering into alternate dimensions. They may only last 90-120 minutes but they have a half-life of several days, as I immediately dive into the nearest forum / sceptics website / Reddit rabbit hole. Still, documentaries like these are the gift that keeps on giving. You can understand why let’s face it, usually the boring, prosaic answer will probably be the correct one, but who wants to watch a documentary about an elderly man who had a heart attack in the woods? Plus, as becomes clear two-thirds of the way in, Paulides is a man with an agenda: BIGFOOT! He is the narrator and interviewer of Missing 411: The Hunted, though he asks a lot more questions than he answers (or wants to).
#MISSING 411 MOVIE SERIES#
So many people have disappeared in fact, with so many co-occuring factors, that David Paulides has written a series of books on the disappearances.

Lots of people have vanished, some for ever, often in clusters (though over many years). In America the risks are very different as trails cover thousands of miles of dense woodland, sharp scree, boulders and water. The most frightening outdoorsy thing that happened to me was crossing Striding Edge, the narrow escarpment at the top of Hellvellyn in the Lake District though my great achievement was eternally dampened when I was overtaken by a sprightly old lady carrying a Tesco carrier bag.

Not like the US, with its vast, remote woods and mountains, beautiful but sometimes dangerous.
I love the outdoors - walking, jogging, being dragged along by my dog while walking or jogging - though the UK is so small I’m not sure it actually qualifies as the “great” outdoors.
