13154190:hkn said:Probably the most reliable and accurate description about what happened JP and Andreas on Monte San Lorenzo comes from Trey Cook via his Facebook:
https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?...0230261306002.350274.670846001&type=1&fref=nf
- - - - - -
Trey Cook
I’ve spoken with Stefan Palm, an instructor in the SBO Svenska Bergsguideorganisationen, who passed me a few details about the tragic accident that claimed the lives of Andreas Fransson and JP Auclair.
What is known is that on 29th Sept at around mid-day in Patagonia, Andreas Fransson and JP Auclair planned to climb and ski the San Lorenzo couloir on Monte San Lorenzo, a 3,706 meter peak on the border of Chile and Argentina in the Patagonian Andes. About two-thirds of the way up, they were swept by a snow release very high above them that carried them about 700 meters down the couloir on to a heavily crevassed glacier.
Filmakers Bjarne Salén and Daniel Rönnbäck were in place to film the descent when they saw the accident happen but were separated by four hours of heavily crevassed terrain. Using their radio, they tried to contact Andreas and JP but there was no answer to their calls. Bjarne and Daniel then used their satellite phone to call Swedish mountain guide Per Ås (in France) and Rolo Garibotti, an Argentine climber who is an authority on the area (currently in Italy) who both advised them to stay put due to the immense and dangerous glacier, cloudy weather, limited time, as well as the difficult situation they were in. Per immediately called his colleague Stefan Palm who has a large network in Chile.
Garibotti then contacted a number of people and by luck Chilean climber Armando Montero happened to be at the trailhead of San Lorenzo, about to start an ascent of the peak. Montero returned to the closest town - Cochrane, Chile - and informed the local authorities. Once the rescue was started Montero and his partner headed back up the mountain, to meet Bjarne and Daniel, whom they met that evening at their base camp.
Stefan Palm also contacted Joaquin Oyarzun, from Heli Ski Guides, a Chilean outfit, to try to organize a helicopter rescue but found that the closest heli was 200 miles away and wouldn’t be able to leave unit the next day, 30 Sept.
Fast action by the authorities, police and military ensured that on Tuesday, 30 Sept at 9:00a, a helicopter flew over to the accident site. The helicopter stopped at basecamp and picked up Montero, an experienced guide and mountaineer. Because of the severe terrain the helicopter was unable to land but nevertheless flew quite low and were able to spot both climbers. Both pilot and Montero who were in the heli reported they had no doubt that both skiers were dead and had probably died immediately. A rescue attempt was therefore called off.
Because the accident occurred on the Argentinian side of the mountain the body recovery is now in the hands of the Argentine gendarmerie. On Tuesday morning a team of five Argentine gendarmes set off to try to reach the bodies. Because of the remoteness it is unlikely that a foot mission will succeed, but there is hope to secure a helicopter later today.
I've also received news that Bjarne and Daniel are now safely off the mountain.
Thoughts and prayers go out to the family and many friends of these two beloved skiers. Special thanks go to Armando Montero and his partner, as well as to Alvaro Herrera, the captain of Carabineros of Cochrane, and to the rest of the authorities that have helped so far.
Share · Today · Edited ·
- - - - - -
13154190:hkn said:Probably the most reliable and accurate description about what happened JP and Andreas on Monte San Lorenzo comes from Trey Cook via his Facebook:
https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?...0230261306002.350274.670846001&type=1&fref=nf
- - - - - -
Trey Cook
I’ve spoken with Stefan Palm, an instructor in the SBO Svenska Bergsguideorganisationen, who passed me a few details about the tragic accident that claimed the lives of Andreas Fransson and JP Auclair.
What is known is that on 29th Sept at around mid-day in Patagonia, Andreas Fransson and JP Auclair planned to climb and ski the San Lorenzo couloir on Monte San Lorenzo, a 3,706 meter peak on the border of Chile and Argentina in the Patagonian Andes. About two-thirds of the way up, they were swept by a snow release very high above them that carried them about 700 meters down the couloir on to a heavily crevassed glacier.
Filmakers Bjarne Salén and Daniel Rönnbäck were in place to film the descent when they saw the accident happen but were separated by four hours of heavily crevassed terrain. Using their radio, they tried to contact Andreas and JP but there was no answer to their calls. Bjarne and Daniel then used their satellite phone to call Swedish mountain guide Per Ås (in France) and Rolo Garibotti, an Argentine climber who is an authority on the area (currently in Italy) who both advised them to stay put due to the immense and dangerous glacier, cloudy weather, limited time, as well as the difficult situation they were in. Per immediately called his colleague Stefan Palm who has a large network in Chile.
Garibotti then contacted a number of people and by luck Chilean climber Armando Montero happened to be at the trailhead of San Lorenzo, about to start an ascent of the peak. Montero returned to the closest town - Cochrane, Chile - and informed the local authorities. Once the rescue was started Montero and his partner headed back up the mountain, to meet Bjarne and Daniel, whom they met that evening at their base camp.
Stefan Palm also contacted Joaquin Oyarzun, from Heli Ski Guides, a Chilean outfit, to try to organize a helicopter rescue but found that the closest heli was 200 miles away and wouldn’t be able to leave unit the next day, 30 Sept.
Fast action by the authorities, police and military ensured that on Tuesday, 30 Sept at 9:00a, a helicopter flew over to the accident site. The helicopter stopped at basecamp and picked up Montero, an experienced guide and mountaineer. Because of the severe terrain the helicopter was unable to land but nevertheless flew quite low and were able to spot both climbers. Both pilot and Montero who were in the heli reported they had no doubt that both skiers were dead and had probably died immediately. A rescue attempt was therefore called off.
Because the accident occurred on the Argentinian side of the mountain the body recovery is now in the hands of the Argentine gendarmerie. On Tuesday morning a team of five Argentine gendarmes set off to try to reach the bodies. Because of the remoteness it is unlikely that a foot mission will succeed, but there is hope to secure a helicopter later today.
I've also received news that Bjarne and Daniel are now safely off the mountain.
Thoughts and prayers go out to the family and many friends of these two beloved skiers. Special thanks go to Armando Montero and his partner, as well as to Alvaro Herrera, the captain of Carabineros of Cochrane, and to the rest of the authorities that have helped so far.
Share · Today · Edited ·
- - - - - -
13154190:hkn said:Probably the most reliable and accurate description about what happened JP and Andreas on Monte San Lorenzo comes from Trey Cook via his Facebook:
https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?...0230261306002.350274.670846001&type=1&fref=nf
- - - - - -
Trey Cook
I’ve spoken with Stefan Palm, an instructor in the SBO Svenska Bergsguideorganisationen, who passed me a few details about the tragic accident that claimed the lives of Andreas Fransson and JP Auclair.
What is known is that on 29th Sept at around mid-day in Patagonia, Andreas Fransson and JP Auclair planned to climb and ski the San Lorenzo couloir on Monte San Lorenzo, a 3,706 meter peak on the border of Chile and Argentina in the Patagonian Andes. About two-thirds of the way up, they were swept by a snow release very high above them that carried them about 700 meters down the couloir on to a heavily crevassed glacier.
Filmakers Bjarne Salén and Daniel Rönnbäck were in place to film the descent when they saw the accident happen but were separated by four hours of heavily crevassed terrain. Using their radio, they tried to contact Andreas and JP but there was no answer to their calls. Bjarne and Daniel then used their satellite phone to call Swedish mountain guide Per Ås (in France) and Rolo Garibotti, an Argentine climber who is an authority on the area (currently in Italy) who both advised them to stay put due to the immense and dangerous glacier, cloudy weather, limited time, as well as the difficult situation they were in. Per immediately called his colleague Stefan Palm who has a large network in Chile.
Garibotti then contacted a number of people and by luck Chilean climber Armando Montero happened to be at the trailhead of San Lorenzo, about to start an ascent of the peak. Montero returned to the closest town - Cochrane, Chile - and informed the local authorities. Once the rescue was started Montero and his partner headed back up the mountain, to meet Bjarne and Daniel, whom they met that evening at their base camp.
Stefan Palm also contacted Joaquin Oyarzun, from Heli Ski Guides, a Chilean outfit, to try to organize a helicopter rescue but found that the closest heli was 200 miles away and wouldn’t be able to leave unit the next day, 30 Sept.
Fast action by the authorities, police and military ensured that on Tuesday, 30 Sept at 9:00a, a helicopter flew over to the accident site. The helicopter stopped at basecamp and picked up Montero, an experienced guide and mountaineer. Because of the severe terrain the helicopter was unable to land but nevertheless flew quite low and were able to spot both climbers. Both pilot and Montero who were in the heli reported they had no doubt that both skiers were dead and had probably died immediately. A rescue attempt was therefore called off.
Because the accident occurred on the Argentinian side of the mountain the body recovery is now in the hands of the Argentine gendarmerie. On Tuesday morning a team of five Argentine gendarmes set off to try to reach the bodies. Because of the remoteness it is unlikely that a foot mission will succeed, but there is hope to secure a helicopter later today.
I've also received news that Bjarne and Daniel are now safely off the mountain.
Thoughts and prayers go out to the family and many friends of these two beloved skiers. Special thanks go to Armando Montero and his partner, as well as to Alvaro Herrera, the captain of Carabineros of Cochrane, and to the rest of the authorities that have helped so far.
Share · Today · Edited ·
- - - - - -
BK Thanks for posting this, although more detail in a gruesome scenario is hard to read, it provides a ton of closure to know more details about the situation and scene on site, especially after reports that they may still be clinging to life out there, alone and injured. I was checking this thread once every 10 minutes yesterday hoping to read about a miracle.
The movie 13 and JPs skiing helped point me in a direction and shaped my life into what it is today. Will never forget how amazing this man was and how humbling the mountains can be.
I hope these two are skiing above us at this very moment, in a place where the danger & terror of our mortal world do not exist.
13154841:.Lincoln said:Has this made it to national news? I honestly think it should for all jp did for us. He had a big part in skiing and co founded armada.
On another note, did you guys see armadas INSTA post? They said no one has recovered the bodies even thought stated otherwise. Guess if they haven't recovered them there's still a slim chance they could make it out.
13154841:.Lincoln said:Has this made it to national news? I honestly think it should for all jp did for us. He had a big part in skiing and co founded armada.
13154841:.Lincoln said:Has this made it to national news? I honestly think it should for all jp did for us. He had a big part in skiing and co founded armada.
On another note, did you guys see armadas INSTA post? They said no one has recovered the bodies even thought stated otherwise. Guess if they haven't recovered them there's still a slim chance they could make it out.
13154841:.Lincoln said:On another note, did you guys see armadas INSTA post? They said no one has recovered the bodies even thought stated otherwise. Guess if they haven't recovered them there's still a slim chance they could make it out.
13154892:AK-Pow29 said:I really hope so man. I really hope so. I'm gonna quote JP for my senior quote.
13154893:vinnypaz said:Here in quebec it is on the front page of every major newspaper, so sad to see this
13154897:DBH5601 said:News is too busy reporting on Phelps's DUI or how some football player hit his wife. If the majority of the population doesn't know who they are (Which 99% don't sadly) it wont produce any profit for them and therefore is looked past.
As slim of a chance as it is, I hope they are alright.
13154900:J.D. said:Guys it's over. Even though we wish there was still a chance. Their bodies have been located by helicopter. The reason they weren't immediately recovered is that the accident occurred on the border between Chile and Argentina so there are political issues, and it's hard to access.
13154977:.Lincoln said:Armadas post said nothing about the confirmation of the death so I'm still gonna believe they are alive until the bodies are recovered with no pulse.
13154977:.Lincoln said:Yes, they have been located. But no one has been to them. They could have just been unconscious for all we know. I might be in a small state of denial but even though there is a slim chance there is still a chance. Armadas post said nothing about the confirmation of the death so I'm still gonna believe they are alive until the bodies are recovered with no pulse.
13155080:zbphoto said:They are doing this out of respect to his family, the entire industry has begun to accept what really happened.
13155110:.Lincoln said:Don't know why this got down voted... that is all true...
Yes, I know they did and it sucks what happened. But you are forgetting the bodies have not yet been touched by a live human being. I know the chances are slim but somehow, someway, they still could be alive.
13155521:smuggs said:When rescuers and other mountaineers say "they located obviously lifeless bodies" without getting grim on what happens in avalanches I think its safe to say they have moved on.
13154901:.Lincoln said:Kinda pisses me off a little bit how we care more about drunk driving and abuse rather than someone's lives. And those people who are drunk and abusive haven't really done anything for their sport like these 2 did. And yeah I'm hoping there's a way they can make it out.
13155739:ski0 said:Micheal Phelps is undoubtably the greatest swimmer of all time, world famous, with 22 olympic medals. You saying he "[hasn't] done anything for [his] sport like these 2" is incredibly stupid. JP is a legend for us, but has certainly nowhere near the international fame and notoriety of Phelps. Furthermore, in Canada, where the guy is actually somewhat well known, the accident is being covered pretty extensively.
13155110:.Lincoln said:Don't know why this got down voted... that is all true...
Yes, I know they did and it sucks what happened. But you are forgetting the bodies have not yet been touched by a live human being. I know the chances are slim but somehow, someway, they still could be alive.
13157071:FelixRioux said:Status Update by Stephane Auclair
Quick translation from the text below;
Weather didn't allow for the geli to take off for a while, it has snowed since the accident, making the bodies harder if not impossible to locate, even more avalanches happen since. The rescue mission will start again on Saturday.
The Auclaur familly will be on their way Monday to Argentina it hopes to find the remains of their loved one.
-----
Allo à tous. Voici les nouvelles du jour. Ce fut malheureusement une autre journée dont le dénouement n'a pas été celui que l'on souhaitait... Tout d'abord, l'hélicoptère n'était pas disponible et prêt à décoller de Perito Moreno (village le plus proche de Monte San Lorenzo) tôt ce matin comme on nous l'avait annoncé. Mais comme la météo n'était pas clémente, ça n'a pas changé grand-chose...
En milieu d'après-midi, l'hélico a finalement été en mesure de prendre son envol vers la montagne. Mais l'équipe de secours a bord a constaté sur place qu'il avait neigé dans la nuit précédente, et que d'autres avalanches avaient eu lieu, rendant ainsi impossible la localisation des corps...
L'équipe de secours reprendra donc sa mission demain matin, et un plan B s'organise. Continuez de penser fort à JP, Andreas, et à nous SVP pour que la mission de récupération soit un succès.
Jean, Ingrid, Jacques et moi serons en route vers l'Argentine à partir de samedi prochain, et serons sur place lundi matin, afin de rencontrer les caméramans, la famille de Andreas, et, je le souhaite, pour y retrouver JP, et un peu de paix, si tout se passe bien d'ici là....
En plus d'Ingrid Sirois, de Jean Auclair, de Nadia Lazzari, de Jacques, de Claire, de Genève, et de toutes nos familles et amis, je désire remercier particulièrement Rolando Garibotti et Per As, nos correspondants italiens et suédois qui nous ont donné l'heure juste et une vision claire du déroulement des opérations, et ce, malgré qu'ils sont encore plus loin que nous du sud de l'Argentine, et qu'ils le font pour l'amour de leurs pairs et de la montagne.
13154841:.Lincoln said:Has this made it to national news? I honestly think it should for all jp did for us. He had a big part in skiing and co founded armada.
On another note, did you guys see armadas INSTA post? They said no one has recovered the bodies even thought stated otherwise. Guess if they haven't recovered them there's still a slim chance they could make it out.
13157686:johnk said:Was just stumbling through old articles and videos of JP.. I found his ESPN Proust Questionnaire, and thought this was relevant.
How would you choose to die, if you could choose?
Hypothermia. In the mountains would be nice. But just hypothermia would be good enough. And if it's in the mountains, even better. From doing first aid classes, hypothermia seems to be the mellowest death. You get into this euphoria and don't really know what's happening. Obviously when you're freezing, the first part would not be very pleasant, but I think at the end you just go numb and a lot of people who have survived it talk about a sensation of comfort.
Sad to see him go so early, but happy to see that it was the way he wished to.