Sidecountry Fatalities on the Rise | Vail Resort Backcountry, CO United States | 02/20/08, by hotChocolate
Did you see the full moon eclipse tonight? I know it's just a shadow
and maybe it's not as exciting as an action filled adventure... Still I
just love seeing stuff like that. I think it's healthy for us all to
remember that the universe, in fact,
does not revolve around whether or not we ski powder every day.
At
the same time I believe that every life is precious and it makes me
truly sad to hear about ski related deaths. The Denver Post published
an article today about one of the skiers who died in the Vail Resort
backcountry this year. I think it's a good reminder to us all. Be safe
and have fun!
Here is the article:
"
Avalanches claiming experts in one of country's deadliest years:
Sidecountry fatalities on the rise"
By Jason Blevins
The Denver Post
Article Last Updated: 02/20/2008 06:25:05 PM MST
Justin
Lozier orders his buddy Jesse Brigham to stop inching his snowboard
closer to the lip of an overhanging ledge of ice, and with an expert
eye, he examines the snow below him.
He hammers the ground hard with his skis, over and over and over again.
He
talks about the "convexity in the snow," sure there is a weakness there
somewhere. Finally, Lozier scoots down the hill a bit farther, looking
for just the right spot, until a fracture appears and triggers a
1-foot-deep avalanche down the steep cliffs in East Vail known as
Charlie's Death Chutes.
Before the 24-year-old professional ski
guide navigates the nearly vertical band of frozen rocks, he warns his
pals to stick to the avalanche's track. To
the left are monstrous cliffs ending in rocks. To the right is a looming cornice of snow.
"Right in the track?" asks Brigham, a 27-year-old snowboarder in his second year as a ski bum in Vail.
Those are the last words Lozier hears Brigham utter.
Minutes
later, as Lozier films from below with his helmet-mounted camera,
Brigham is caught in an 800-foot-wide avalanche that throws him down
the cliffs like a flake of confetti.
Fuming snow barrels over Lozier's skis.
His friends don't panic.
"This is what we were trained to do. We got this," Lozier says to 32-year-old snowboarder Jim Muguerza.
But
there is no signal on their digital avalanche transceivers. The pair's
guttural screams — "Jesse!" "Jesse!" — grow increasingly frantic.
In
the haunting video Lozier captured that first Friday morning in
January, the confidence quickly dissolved in Lozier's voice. Muguerza
located Brigham 500 feet below them, sealed facedown in 7 feet of
concretelike avalanche debris. They desperately dug, crying and
cursing. The pair traded CPR efforts for an hour in between passionate
calls to Vail's ski patrol.
"It goes from so stoked, like 'Yeah, Jesse!' to tragic, horrifying
in a second," Lozier says, watching the video on his laptop. "It was just a second."

In this frame from video Jesse Brigham is seen moments before his fatal ski down the slope. (Photo from video courtesy of Justin Lozier)
By the time two veteran Vail patrollers arrived, Brigham had become
the seventh of nine U.S. skiers and 'boarders killed this season after
they left a nearby resort in search of steep powder. It's already an
ugly record for deaths in what is shaping up to be one of the country's
most fatal avalanche seasons.
These aren't clueless adventure-seekers. Every sidecountry
death this season has involved expert riders carrying avalanche
transceivers, shovels and probe poles
While
it's difficult to gauge growth in backcountry skiing, one barometer is
the sales of the Backcountry Access digital avalanche transceiver — or
beacon. This year company vice president Bruce Edgerly expects a 30
percent increase in beacon sales, on top of 40 percent last year and 20
percent annual growth in the years before that.
An increase in
deaths can be expected when there is that kind of growth in a sport
played on a field that can collapse and kill in an instant.
But it's the location of the deaths that has avalanche researchers worrying.
Of
the 43 deaths recorded by avalanche researchers in North America this
season, almost a fifth were in resort sidecountry, the easily accessed
areas a short stroll past a resort boundary.
Traditionally,
out-of-bounds or sidecountry deaths in the U.S. account for 6 percent
to 9 percent of the country's avalanche fatalities.
"Something is happening
this winter that hasn't happened before,"
said Dale Atkins, an avalanche researcher and educator. "These gates
have been open for 15 to 20 years and we haven't seen these sort of
accidents, so something is going on." Part of it is equipment. Skis have widened, enabling less- experienced riders to venture into deeper, steeper snow.
This year, a tremendous snowfall, coupled with high- wind
storms, has created a complex snowpack, with several
avalanche-generating layers lurking as deep as 10 feet below the soft
powder on the surface.
On top of all that is the widespread pursuit of easily
accessed steep-and-deep powder, encouraged largely by films featuring
iconic athletes ripping down pristine big mountains.
"Most people who go through those gates don't realize that in
that quarter-inch span — the thickness of a rope — they go from a very
managed and safe environment to the Wild West," Atkins said.
The
only other time the out-of-bounds death rate climbed as high as this
year was in 1987, when three died in two February slides outside
Telluride ski area and three died in a single February avalanche beyond
the rope of Breckenridge ski area.
Following that calamitous
season, the U.S. Forest Service in Colorado took stock of its ski
resort backcountry access policy, which until then consisted of small
openings in resort boundary ropes. Local law enforcement and resort
operators in Summit County urged the Forest Service to close swaths of
public land flanking resort boundaries. But the public advised
otherwise.
"We got overwhelming public feedback that reasonable
access should be maintained," said Ken Kowynia, winter sports program
manager for the Forest Service's Rocky Mountain region.
The
Forest Service resisted pressure to close public lands and instead
created specific and well-signed backcountry access points designed to
prevent the unaware skier from wandering out of bounds.
This
year Don Dressler, snow ranger for the Forest Service's Holy Cross
Ranger District, which includes Vail and its surrounding public lands,
has spent more time than ever hiking the 15 minutes from Vail ski area
up to the historically deadly Benchmark Bowl.
He talks with
skiers and 'boarders, making sure they have the right gear. Warning
about slide danger. Talking about the safest routes down the bowl.
"Just because you have the equipment doesn't guarantee your safety. We've seen that this year," Dressler said.
The
recent spike in avalanche deaths has some avalanche educators tweaking
their tried-and-true teaching strategies, including an increased
emphasis on digging work and route selection.
"I see too many
people coming out of avalanche courses with confidence instead of being
a little more tentative," said Dean Cummings, a helicopter skiing
pioneer with a heli-skiing business in Alaska. This season he organized
a new-school avalanche awareness program at Utah's Snowbird ski area.
"Look
at the mountains three dimensionally," he said. "If everything became
liquid, where would it flow? Where would it get pushed? Where would it
push you?"
Lozier had skied Charlie's Death Chutes several times
already this season before that Jan. 4 morning with Brigham. He liked
to jump the knoll in the middle of the cliffs, landing in the deep
powder far below. He was unaware of the fatal avalanche history
haunting that particular face in East Vail.
Since that day, he
has struggled. He hears the video's audio all the time; he can't stop
the scenes from playing over and over in his head. He kept Brigham's
helmet in his apartment for a while, wondering whether the big hole in
the side meant his friend suffered a serious blow that maybe, he hopes,
eclipsed the terror of burial.
He has a chart of the avalanche,
compiled by researchers with the Colorado Avalanche Information Center,
that shows a barely detectable 1-millimeter-thick layer of weak snow 7
feet below the surface that triggered the avalanche that took his
friend.
"I'll never be the same," he said. "I wonder if it ruined me."
Lozier will soon spend a week in Silverton, studying for his Level III avalanche certification.
He's decided his friend Jesse — whose favorite saying was "I do what I want" — would want him to continue exploring on snow.
"I'm dedicating my life to avalanche safety, and it's because of Jesse," he said.
Jason Blevins: 303-954-1374 or jblevins@denverpost.com
Colorado sidecountry / out-of-bounds avalanche deaths and close callsEven
before the worst of the avalanche season, this has been a bad year for
deaths and close-calls in Colorado and elsewhere in North America:
1/12/2008:
One skier, Matthew Gustafson, 33, killed and another skier partially
buried in East Vail's King Tut slidepath, just outside the Vail ski
area boundary.
1/8/2008: Rescuers find Adam Putnam, 36, and
Rachel Fehl, 30, alive after the pair of snowboarders spent three
nights lost near the Santa Fe ski area. The two left the Santa Fe ski
area three days earlier to ride out-of-bounds.
1/4/2008: Snowboarder Jesse Brigham dies in an avalanche in East Vail's Charlie's Death Chutes outside the Vail ski area.
1/5/2008:
Two Albuquerque snowboarders, Michael George and Kyle Kerschen, both
27, go missing after leaving the Wolf Creek ski area boundary. The two
still have not been found.
12/30/2007: A skier is partially buried in an avalanche above Lost Lake outside the backcountry gate of Eldora Ski Area.
12/18/2007: One unknown skier partially buried in East Vail.
Outside Colorado:
1/25/2008:
A series of avalanches just outside the boundary of southern
California's Mountain High ski area kill three skiers. Off-duty
Mountain High patroller Michael McKay, 23, was the first killed. Then
Mountain High ski patroller Darren Coffey, 33, and television actor
Christopher Allport, 60, were killed in a separate slide. A day later,
24-year-old snowboarder Oscar Gonzales Jr. was rescued after spending
the night outdoors after he left the Mountain High ski area boundary.
1/18/2008:
Peter Bowle-Evans, 61, of Golden, B.C. dies in an avalanche outside the
boundary of Western Canada's Kicking Horse ski area. The veteran
hang-glider's death marks the 11th avalanche fatality in Canada of the
season.
1/13/2008: Two skiers are killed in an avalanche just
outside the boundary ropes of northern Montana's Whitefish ski area.
Anthony Kollmann, 19, of Kalispell, MT, was killed in an avalanche that
also killed 36-year-old Whitefish resident David Gogolak. 1/0-2/2008: A
29-year-old skier is killed after he and a 21-year-old snowboarder were
caught in an avalanche in a permanently closed section of British
Columbia's Whistler ski area.
12/09/2007: The search for three
snowboarders last seen near the Crystal Mountain ski area south of
Seattle is suspended. Kevin Carter, 26, Devlin Williams, 29, and
Phillip Hollins, 41, are suspected buried in the avalanche-prone
terrain near the ski area.
That's Our Opinion. What's Yours?