Avalanche Awareness & Safety

J.D.

Active member
Staff member
This thread is to discuss particular incident reports, stories, discussion of snowpack in particular areas, and other safety topics.

Links to local avalanche reports and sites:

Canada:http://www.avalanche.ca/

Kananaskis Country, AB:https://www.facebook.com/KCPublicSafety

U.S. PNW:http://www.nwac.us

Colorado:http://avalanche.state.co.us/

Utah:http://utahavalanchecenter.org/

Tahoe:http://www.sierraavalanchecenter.org/

East Sierra:http://esavalanche.org/

Mt. Shasta:http://shastaavalanche.org/

New Hampshire:http://www.mountwashingtonavalanchecenter.org/

Montana:http://www.mtavalanche.com/

**This thread was edited on Dec 30th 2014 at 9:00:47am

**This thread was edited on Feb 8th 2018 at 3:13:29pm
 
Thanks for the US sites. If there are any other regional ones shoot me the link.
 
To anyone who hasn't taken an avi 1 class, do it. Whether your going into the backcountry or not, it changes your whole perspective on snow.
 
I just finished up reading Staying Alive in Avalanche Terrain in preparation for a week long snow science and avalanche safety class in the Tetons next week. This stuff is awesome. I'm so stoked.
 
Bumping this.

Looks like we had the first avy incident of the year this morning:http://snowbrains.com/1st-avalanche-accident-of-201516-was-today-2-people-caught-300-slide-1-injured/

We skied that area Tuesday, dug a pit, found some fun depth hoar, and a pretty well bonded rain layer about 10cms up, skied conservatively and were fine.

Went back this morning, noticed severe wind loading on the drive up, got the truck stuck in a drift 40 yards from the parking lot, and spent the next 2 hours digging it out. Once we did get it out we poked around a little bit (didn't really even leave the parking lot) and realized we did not want to be skiing in those conditions. Warned a group of kids that were about to boot pack up (later found out they heeded the warning and turned around soon after) and headed home.

Saw the report when we got back, that's where we were planning on skiing and if we hadn't been digging the truck out (and if we hadn't thought about the conditions) we would have been on the skin track/in that bowl when it broke loose.

Now I'm really itching to get into some snow classes.
 
If you're going out in Colorado, be extra careful--most amount of people skiing the most dangerous snowpack. Anyone going out there should take an avy 1 course. Plus, there's a bunch of slednecks to worry about
 
13721585:SidelineSwap said:
If you're going out in Colorado, be extra careful--most amount of people skiing the most dangerous snowpack. Anyone going out there should take an avy 1 course. Plus, there's a bunch of slednecks to worry about

this is the most generalized and unhelpful comment, particularly since its placed in a sticky about BC Safety and awareness. Let's keep this thread for valuable links and facts.

There is nothing special about Colorado's snowpack, and absolutely nothing unique to it that it doesn't share with other states and provinces that share a similar geography ... Utah, Wyoming, Montana, Alberta and BC can produce very similar snowpacks... Colorado has had some bad years, but that's because of the decisions made by BC users in the area, and it reflects the fact that there are more users concentrated in this area. Blaming the snowpack is not an effective tool to mitigate BC accidents.

Apply the knowledge you learn in your courses, keep an ongoing dialogue with your partners, and seek out mentorship opportunities. Complex terrain and complex snowpacks require complex decision making abilities.

The most dangerous thing in BC is the User... your decision making ability is your biggest piece of safety equipment... and the shit that goes down in movies is (for the most part) well thought out and done with the assistance of Medical, Rescue and Heli support... resource the average user does not have at their disposal.

Have a great season and stay safe.
 
I'll bump this thread again... If you're backcountry skiing and not taking the time to get educated then you are doing a diservice to the people you are going out with.

www.kbyg.org is a great first step towards avalanche awareness.
 
I produced a new ~30 min avy awareness video with the guides at Colorado Mountain School (disclosure, I work for them). It's a great way to refresh for the season if you have training, or a good starting point if you're new to the backcountry. The video is part of an online course where you take quizzes, read case studies, etc. All free. Check it out here:
https://coloradomountainschool.com/product/avalanche-awareness-clinic/

If you dig it, send it to your ski touring partners so we can all be on our game at the start of the season.
 
Back
Top