Point 'B'
You need the map program but it is where it crosses the Cutbank River there is a skinny pit there too
What happens with life insurance?
Mine or the guests that come onto the place for some extreme sports and never leave kind of thing. I'm pretty sure that is covered in the 4 page waiver that basically says, 'Have fun, while it lasts.' and then some small decal from your insurance agent/ Team of Lawyers. The on the zip lines make sure the HA comes from a big case of the willies sign for and not the ones that come as the whole zip lines crashes to the ground around you in no flames as steel doesn't burn. I'm going to assume black ink is going to be the favorite color for obvious reasons that is reserved for guests of the 11teenth floor. (That would be at the top of the 11 story high 60 ft silo with the clear dome that is at the stopping location. The reason you stop right there is in the winter the valley to the north is at -30 and if a Chinook is coming it will hit that spot first and then you are at 0. The view from there has long sunsets because the mountains block the sun out before it is very low in the sky so the graduations takes more than an hour, good reason to be above tree height and below is the VR testing room for days when the trails are muddy (other days it is a paying kind of ride 30 miles from the nearest town, so sleeping in your car or tent is part of the admission price. Bear proofing would probably be my 'list to do things'
In theory the body could be left to the site if it came from a long ways off. If mass starvation is facing the planet I doubt the 'whee factory' will be much of a hit.
It's still big enough and remote enough that it would qualify for growing hemp and no fencing would be needed, lots of custom dozer work available though. The first area and the one when you jump across the Smokey are similar in design. The one on the other side is over a sand/gravel pit that is huge in area but only averages out to be 1 meter or less in depth. That is perfect as all you want to do is move it around inside a border so it suits your needs. Moving is an improvement so you can tax all of that in while you make a lot of all weather packed sand trails through a variety of trails over land. The ones that want to do the 10k on water can use the cat to peel back the moss during a frosty winter and the boaters will figure out the rest. A swamp trail is wave proof also as the moss stops the the 60mph wind from causing a ripple if it is a cross wind. Some of the better sites are also 'islands' of various sizes. Winter is the time to move in the heavy stuff and then the roads are high speed, just slippery.
This exile stuff isn't as bad as it's made out to be.