skidoo
Line Up and Wait
Bryon,
With a IFR WAAS GPS, the vast majority of LNAV only approaches have an advisory glidepath displayed. When this occurs, the annunciation is LNAV+V, with the +V indicating the advisory nature of the glidepath indication. The advisory glidepath may be followed in the same was as a LPV or LNAV/VNAV, but the altimeter still must be used to determine any minimum altitude or MDA. Since any descent rate up to a 7 to 1 slope may be used by the pilot on a LNAV approach, following the glidepath is acceptable between minimum altitudes as it is well shallower than the 7 to 1 slope. The advisory glidepath is considered as merely an aid to establish a stabilized approach to the MDA, and has no consideration what so ever for obstacle clearance once you are below the MDA.
There is more consideration given for obstacles on a LPV and LNAV/VNAV, but the path below the DA does not have to be obstacle free. If I am interpreting the TERPS correctly, obstacles on a vertically guided approach such as a LPV must not be higher than 2/3 of the glidepath angle, starting from the threshold and continuing to the DA. So with a 3 degree glideslope, obstacles can exist as long as they don't exceed a 2 degree slope. There are some fine details that I am ignoring for this discussion, such as the TCH, curvature of the earth, ... .
In this case, there is only a GPS approach available and its MDA is 1600 or 1400 ft AGL depending on direction. Either way, the top of the fog layer is 800 ft AGL. So, One way back in is over water where the threshold is perhaps <500 ft from the shoreline. So, you can know there are no obstacles down to a hundred feet or so. That is if you can skew the glide path one direction because there are hills on the other side which is probably the reason for the high MDA. But, if the engine quits and you end up in the water, we would die anyway of hypothermia (water near 33F.)