Massive avalanche in Manaslu: Glen Plake Alive!

Pitolairas

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http://daily.epictv.com/blog/2012/09/23/avalanche-on-manaslu-plake-alive-remy-and-greg-missing/

14:21 UPDATE: Just got a call from Glen Plake who told me this: “I’m OK, a bit beat up; missing some teeth and a bruised eye but write in big capital letters, GLEN PLAKE IS ALIVE AND HE’S COMING HOME.

It was a major, major accident. There are up to 14 people missing. There were 25 tents at Camp 3 [6800m] and all of them were destroyed, 12 tents at Camp 2 [6300m] were banged up and moved around. Greg and I were in a tent together, Rémy was in another. It was 4:45a and I was in my sleeping bag with my headlamp on reading my devotional when we heard a roar. Greg looked at me and said, “That was a big gust of wind,” then a second later, “No, that was an avalanche.” Then it hit us. I was swept 300 meters over a serac and down the mountain and came to a stop still in my sleeping bag, still inside the tent. We all went to sleep with avalanche transceivers on so I punched my way out of the tent and started searching. Searched for 10 minutes when I realized I was barefoot. Greg was using my down suit for a pillow and I found my suit, I found everything that was in my tent – camera, sleeping bag, ski boots, it was like someone had thrown my gear in the back of a pickup – but there was no sign of Greg. Rémy and his tent are nowhere to be found.

The Dynafit crew were sleeping at a high Camp 2 and were immediately on site to rescue people. Sergio, Stephane, Doji our Sherpa – all strong alpinists – have all come up to search. We’ve done three searches and when the fog rolled in we had to call it off.

It was a massive serac fall, probably 600 to 700 meters across. It’s a war zone up here.”

23 September 2012, Manaslu Camp 3 (6800m) – The worst of phone calls came through a few minutes ago when Kimberly Plake called. “There’s been a massive avalanche at Camp 3. Glen’s OK but he told me, ‘Rémy and Greg are gone.’”

Glen told Kimberly that he thought there were around 16 climbers in Camp 3 (6800m) and that he was in his tent reading his Bible when a massive avalanche ripped through the camp. Glen was rescued from a crevasse by Canadian skier Greg Hill’s team who were helping him down the mountain when he called.

Greg Hill reports on his Facebook page that his team are all OK.

Factual information is sketchy but police officials report that rescuers have recovered the bodies of a German guide and Nepalese guide and that seven other bodies have been spotted. Around 13 are believed to be missing. Other reports indicate that between five to eight injured climbers had been evacuated by helicopter to Katmandu before rescue efforts were called off due to bad weather.

Please keep Rémy Lécluse and Greg Costa along with their friends and family in your thoughts and prayers. With hope, they might be some of the climbers that were flown to Katmandu.

I’ll continue to update this post as news comes in.
 
It makes a good case for divine interventions. Glen was reading his bible, escaped without serious injury.

Shits crazy I'm glad Glen is ok. and my thoughts go out to others who are still missing.
 
Damn that sucks. vibes to them and there families. I can't imagine how scary an avalanche would be in a tent where couldn't really escape.
 
praying for all those who are still missing- its terrible to see something like this happen...hopefully they find as many people as they can
 
Very sad and crazy story. Damn. Sending vibes out to all the families. Plake rescued from a crevasse, that is so intense, I cannot imagine.
 
yeah i remember reading an espn article that mentioned glen, hoji, and hill were skiing in nepal- i guess glen and greg stayed behind - i cant find any news on greg good to hear glen is ok
 
Tragic news. You have to wonder about the guides choice of camp, but from the sounds of things it sounds like the entire mountain came down on top of them. To be in Plake's shoes, reading the Bible while in Nepal, and have something like this happen must have been a real head shake.

Condolences, and best wishes as the search continues.
 
Yikes. That is bad, bad news. Hjorleifson is such a sick skier, hope this turns out better than it looks.

This popped up on CNN but provided very little insight...

Source: http://www.cnn.com/2012/09/23/world/asia/nepal-avalanche/index.html?hpt=hp_t3#cnn-disqus-area

Kathmandu, Nepal (CNN) -- At least 11 climbers were killed in an avalanche Sunday morning on Manaslu, the world's eighth-highest peak, a pilot who took part in the rescue effort said.

Steve Bruce Bokan of Fishtail Air also said that those coordinating the rescue report as many as 38 people missing.

He said there were reports that an entire camp was swept away by the avalanche, which took place Sunday at about 5 a.m. local time.

The Nepalese government reported only three deaths, but said the toll could go up.

The three include a Spaniard, a German, and a Nepalese sherpa, said Bal Krishna Ghimire, spokesman for the Ministry of Tourism.

Among the missing are seven French nationals and a Canadian, Ghimire said.

Attempts to find the missing will resume Monday, said Yograj Kadel of Simrik Air, which was also involved in rescuing the mountaineers by helicopter.

The mountaineers were at an altitude of 6,600 meters (21,650 feet), Kadel said. The mountain is 8,163 meters (26,780 feet) high.

According to Nepal tourism officials, 231 foreign mountaineers from 25 teams were attempting to climb the mountain in the current autumn season that ends in November.
 
They all went to bed with beacons so they knew being under glaciated terrain like that , that there was a possibility of serac fall. I don't think there there would have been a safer or better option really. We all know the risks and we all have our risks tolerance its all a game of chance and sometimes you loose. Vibes to all lost and missing
 
Holy shit. So fucked up. Glad to hear Glen made it, but way too many people are still missing. Hopefully everyone is okay. Losing someone on the mountain is fucked. It happens, but it will never not be fucked.
 
yeah the others were all buried alive at god's hands because they weren't reading their bibles. seems legit, real good case you got there my man.

tragic. i can only imagine what searching for that many people must be like.
 
exactly, i can;'t imagine . No shovel , no probe just a beacon, your hands and 20+ burials. You know that statically if they are still alive and just buried that you have about 5 to 15 minutes before they start dying. Man that must be quite the feeling
 
A bit more info, Mike D just posted this link...

Source: http://www.thestar.com/news/world/article/1261056--at-least-9-climbers-killed-in-avalanche-on-mount-manaslu-in-nepal

KATHMANDU, NEPAL—A Canadian from Revelstoke, B.C. survived an avalanche in Nepal that left at least nine dead and several others missing, a newspaper in Revelstoke says.

Another Canadian, a cardiologist from Quebec, is still unaccounted for, according to CBC News.

Greg Hill has been blogging and tweeting about skiing and mountain climbing in the Himalayas.

His last tweet from earlier this month says he was “off to try (his) luck on (Mount) Manaslu,” in northern Nepal, where officials say the avalanche hit climbers Sunday, killing at least nine.

Dipendra Paude of Nepal's tourism ministry, which controls all international climbing expeditions, told U.K. paper The Telegraph the dead climbers were from Spain, Germany and Nepal.

Those missing include five French nationals, a Canadian and an Italian climber, The Telegraph said.

Foreign Affairs officials in Ottawa were not immediately available for comment.

The Revelstoke Times Review says Hill wrote on Facebook this morning that “a huge avalanche swept through camp 3 at 4:45 am on Manaslu, catching lots of people in their sleeping bags, many dead, and injured.

“Luckily our team is fine, and helped with the rescue, Glenn Plake is also fine but my heart goes out to all the others.”

Just two days ago, ESPN reported Hill was planning to climb Mount Manaslu and made it to “7,000 meters earlier this week before a blizzard and dangerously hollow snow forced his and Plake’s teams back down the mountain to wait for better weather.”

Plake’s team, which ESPN said includes Rémy Lécluse and Greg Costa, spent “the prior few weeks acclimatizing and dodging storms.” The team wants “to become the first to ski the world’s eighth highest peak without oxygen.”

On Sunday, police official Basanta Bahadur Kuwar said the bodies of a Nepalese guide and a German man were recovered and that rescue pilots had spotted seven other bodies on the slopes of Mount Manaslu , the eighth-highest mountain in the world.

In Madrid, Spain's Foreign Ministry said one of those killed was Spanish, but did not release the person's identity.

The identities of the other victims were still being confirmed.

Ten other climbers survived the avalanche but many were injured and were flown to hospitals by rescue helicopters, Kuwar said.

Rescue pilot Pasang, who uses only one name, said three injured French citizens and two Germans had been transported to hospitals in Kathmandu.

He said rescuers were also attempting to bring the bodies of the dead back to the base camp.

Weather conditions were deteriorating and it was not possible to continue air searches of the mountain Sunday afternoon, Kuwar said.

The avalanche hit the climbers at a camp at 7,000 metres (22,960 feet) early in the morning as they were preparing to head toward the summit, which is 8,156 metres (26,760 feet) high.

There were Italian, German and French teams on the mountain, with a total of 231 climbers and guides, but not all were at the higher camps, officials said.

It is currently the beginning of Nepal's autumn mountaineering season. The autumn season comes right after the end of the monsoon rains, which make weather conditions unpredictable, and is not as popular among mountaineers as the spring season, when hundreds of climbers crowd the high Himalayan peaks.

Nepal has eight of the 14 highest peaks in the world. Climbers have complained in recent years that climbing conditions have deteriorated and risks of accidents have increased.

Veteran mountain guide Apa, who has climbed Mount Everest a record 21 times, travelled for months across Nepal earlier this year campaigning about the effects of global warming on the mountain peaks.

He told The Associated Press the mountains now have considerably less ice and snow, making it harder for climbers to use ice axes and crampons on their boots to get a grip on the slopes.

Loose snow also increases the risk of avalanches.

Officials were investigating the cause of Sunday's avalanche.
 
Eric wasnt there. i saw him 2 days ago at the MSP premiere in whistler i dont think he could make it to nepal and up 6800m in that time and he posted on facebook "I am in Canada not Nepal..."

but super sad story. vibes to friends and family of those involved. glad to hear Glen Plake is ok as well.

keep us posted
 
Damn. That's awful, vibes to the families.

On the other hand, nature itself doesn't have the balls to kill Glen fucking Plake.
 
how does divine intervention factor in in any way to a tragedy such as this? plake thankfully is alive through pure dumb luck, nothing more nothing less. good to hear about hill and hoji also. my thoughts go out to the victims and their families.
 
insane. half a mile wide. sounds like worst case scenario. they tell you about the camping 20 degrees from any potential slide path in avy 1 but i guess in mtns like that, nowhere is completely safe.
 
That's terrible news. Vibes to everyone and everyone's families involved. Pushing the limits like this obviously creates dangers that wouldn't exist, but it's still tragic. Glad to hear Plake is ok
 
Wow, such a tragedy. Accidents of this magnitude really make you think twice. My thoughts are with the families of the victims, and the survivors as well.

 
Sad to hear. Best wishes to their families.
They're totally right about the climate change thing--crappy winters make for way scarier mountaineering.

 
I'm surprised they were climbing this early with the monsoon season still going on. Tragedy nonetheless.

Remember sort of daydreaming about Manaslu after Ericsson almost skied Dhaulagiri, but those mountains are fucking scary. They are so massive, they demand respect, but they may give none back. rip
 
Search has been called off seems like. Death toll is at 8 now according to CNN. Seems like EpicTV is putting up the most up to date releases, probably due to their involvement with Plake's party.http://daily.epictv.com/blog/2012/0...te-chamonix-town-hall-holds-press-conference/
September 24th 2012, 10:30am[/b]A press conference just took place at the town hall in Chamonix, France. Jean-Louis Verdier, deputy mayor, and Christian Trommsdorff, director of the SNGM (French Mountain Guides Syndicate), explained that, “The rescue teams feel they did all they could to find further victims, but they have now given up all hope of finding any more survivors. The search has been called off for good.”It was initially reported that seven French alpinists had been killed or were missing, though this number has now been brought down to six. The seventh person is actually a Canadian national. Amongst this list of six French victims are: two guides who are reported dead, one guide missing, two clients dead and one client missing. Their names will be released in another press conference this afternoon as some families have yet to be notified.”There were still five injured people at base camp this morning, they were taken to Kathmandu today. It is believed that one of these people is a French alpinist who was dug out of the snow in a deep state of hypothermia.The town of Chamonix also expressed their deep gratitude to the Nepalese rescue teams who “reacted very quickly and were on site in record time. This is the first time that Nepal has put such big means into place, proving that they are no longer behind. They have done their very best and we thank them for their hard work.”
 
The search has been called off for good.”

My eyes kind of stuck on that for a few seconds. Im not sure if its the fact that they have given up hope ( which im well aware the possibility of survivors is practically zero) or if its the possibly that then wont return to find the bodies with winter fast approaching. Seems kind of wrong to leave them there but why endanger more for those who are already lost? I don't but im pretty bothered by that the most.
 
Damn, so sad it's been called off! Thinking of those families that are yet to be notified. Poor people, I just can't imagine how sad it is!
 
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