Mt_P0wDerJuNkIe
Active member
Read this and take note! Ive been seeing way to much retarted activity OB this season.
It’s time for my mid-winter rant about backcountry (I should say
sidecountry) behavior. I was inspired Saturday when I watch three people
ski an avalanche chute just outside the Snowbowl boundary together……at
the same time. This particular slope had a large skier-triggered
avalanche on it this year. I doubt these three riders read the avalanche
advisory, so I’m aiming my comments at Snow Bowl parents who may have
kids, teenagers or older, ducking the ropes or skiing out-of-bounds.
Once you leave the ski area; you’re on your own. The areas just outside
the ropes are backcountry. There is no slope management or patrol. You
should be prepared to deal with a burial or trauma. It would be a major
operation to extract someone from the Rankin Lake basin just outside
Snowbowl. Folks are treating this terrain as part of the ski area. It’s
not. Do you think people who would ski three at a time down an avalanche
chute know when the snow is stable and when it isn’t?
We just had a terrible incident in the sidecountry near Stevens Pass,
Washington. Bozeman experienced a major avalanche on Saddle Peak (where
everyone hikes) just outside Bridger’s boundary a couple of seasons ago
(fortunately no one was hurt). Everyone wants to ski the gnarly
terrain; the sidecountry is popular. Have you talked to your kids about
drugs, avalanches and skiing out-of-bounds?
It’s time for my mid-winter rant about backcountry (I should say
sidecountry) behavior. I was inspired Saturday when I watch three people
ski an avalanche chute just outside the Snowbowl boundary together……at
the same time. This particular slope had a large skier-triggered
avalanche on it this year. I doubt these three riders read the avalanche
advisory, so I’m aiming my comments at Snow Bowl parents who may have
kids, teenagers or older, ducking the ropes or skiing out-of-bounds.
Once you leave the ski area; you’re on your own. The areas just outside
the ropes are backcountry. There is no slope management or patrol. You
should be prepared to deal with a burial or trauma. It would be a major
operation to extract someone from the Rankin Lake basin just outside
Snowbowl. Folks are treating this terrain as part of the ski area. It’s
not. Do you think people who would ski three at a time down an avalanche
chute know when the snow is stable and when it isn’t?
We just had a terrible incident in the sidecountry near Stevens Pass,
Washington. Bozeman experienced a major avalanche on Saddle Peak (where
everyone hikes) just outside Bridger’s boundary a couple of seasons ago
(fortunately no one was hurt). Everyone wants to ski the gnarly
terrain; the sidecountry is popular. Have you talked to your kids about
drugs, avalanches and skiing out-of-bounds?