Five killed in Loveland Pass Avalanche
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Please be respectful when posting - family and friends of fallen climbers might be reading this forum.
Please be respectful when posting - family and friends of fallen climbers might be reading this forum.
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Re: Five killed in Loveland Pass Avalanche
Anyone considered the possibility that climate change may be changing the rules here? From what I have heard it is winter in spring up there right now.
- TallGrass
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Re: Five killed in Loveland Pass Avalanche
If you get "caught" in a Cat5 hurricane, you've been not only blissfully ignoring the media for days, but also the sky rolling in.JROSKA wrote:seems comparable to an F-5 tornado or a Category 5 hurricane. Extremely unlikely, and probably not survivable if you get caught in it.
F-5 tornadoes are quite survivable provided 1. you're not sleeping soundly (even then the sound of a freight train...) and most important 2. you have appropriate shelter nearby (e.g. basement). Most killed are in trailer homes or places sans cellars. Conditions ripe for twisters don't occur in the snap of a finger.
The Loveland Pass avalanche reminds me more of Tunnel Creek for one.
http://www.nytimes.com/projects/2012/snow-fall/
http://www.greenm3.com/gdcblog/2012/2/2 ... -aval.html
http://news.blogs.cnn.com/2012/02/20/av ... ry-skiers/
Anyone ever do Egg(s)-in-Basket Countermeasures? (Maybe "Boarders-in-Bowl" c.m.?) Like having a couple radios in the back country, first goes down and then stops at a safe point (e.g. high island out of zone), radios up for next, and one by one across until the sweep guy comes down. No radios? Go by line of sight, and zig-zag the zone with each turn (a stop point) being on the highest safest edge reachable, and no clustering on turns (unless needed to maintain visual chain, limit 2) rather one person advances at a time like 3rd going homeplate, THEN 2nd base going to 3rd, THEN 1st can go to 2nd, THEN batter to 1st. Fewer people and less weight on snow, and more first responders should an avy occur. Seems a driving factor is if you get together as a group, and you hike up as a group, you want to ski/board down as a group versus having one guy at a time cross the rickety-bridge sections.
I've seen similar things happen with motorcycle groups where they get caught up in being and riding like a group and either domino or get taken out like bowling pins because they aren't each maintaining their own safety cushion ("oh, a car could merge into our formation..."). I know MANY who absolutely avoid charity rides just for these reasons, like some unknown idiot who thinks it's his right to ride right next to you, can't ride below 5mph without hanging both feet out like training wheels, all while others crowd your 6:00.
Put another way, if you say you're heading down and a friend or the rest of the group says "Cool! I'm coming too!" should your response be any different whether you're on an avy path or atop the Hourglass? Granted, it's a lot harder for "multiple people to rap on the SAME rope" in the 'glass. Who was acting as the Safety, the Anchor, the Belay, the Backup, the Sweeper in this group? After WWI, do troops still try advancing under fire or through mine fields en mass? Or is it one-at-a-time while the rest lend support/cover/observation/etc.? Avy could still rip, but it'd a fraction of the people caught and both 1st response and call-for-backup times would plummet. Yeah, yeah, "safe" doesn't sound "fun" so maybe they need cool bro' terms like "Hey, who's gonna Hawk this while K-bro goes on Point? Everyone make sure to stop and GoPro him." Enthusiasts are going to continue setting off and getting caught in avalanches, so what's the best way groups can cut their losses?
"A few hours' mountain climbing make of a rogue and a saint two fairly equal creatures.
Tiredness is the shortest path to equality and fraternity - and sleep finally adds to them liberty."
Tiredness is the shortest path to equality and fraternity - and sleep finally adds to them liberty."
Re: Five killed in Loveland Pass Avalanche
There is a standard in place to characterize a slide. The main attributes are the size of the slide relative to the path (R scale), how destructive is the slide (D scale), and the type of slide (hard slab, soft slab, etc.). Check out S.W.A.G by the american avalanche association (snow, weather, and avalanche observational guidelines). Per the CAIC, this particular slide was rated a R3 D3 hard slab - medium in size relative to the path and able to bury or destroy a car (but probably not large enough to destroy a wood framed house)......so pretty damn large and destructive.JROSKA wrote:I'm not familiar with how to grade avalanches....
Didn't I ever tell you.....Bumble's bounce!!!
http://exploringtherockies.com/" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
http://www.berthoudpass.org" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
@snow_nerd
http://exploringtherockies.com/" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
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@snow_nerd
Re: Five killed in Loveland Pass Avalanche
Wildsnow.com's two articles and extended commentary offer the most in-depth and useful info out there (IMO), for those wanting to read more.
http://www.wildsnow.com/9980/sheep-cree ... ite-visit/
http://www.wildsnow.com/9962/caic-sheep ... annotated/
http://www.wildsnow.com/9980/sheep-cree ... ite-visit/
http://www.wildsnow.com/9962/caic-sheep ... annotated/
- dave_navy_VA
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Re: Five killed in Loveland Pass Avalanche
Thanks very much for that post and heads-up that wildsnow.com had some follow-up. Their after action assessment was one thing but I appreciated the pics and overlays to appreciate the terrain and especially the perspective from the 1948 incident. I have been up there in summer/fall only, so this was helpful to me.ulvetano wrote:Wildsnow.com's two articles and extended commentary offer the most in-depth and useful info out there (IMO), for those wanting to read more.
http://www.wildsnow.com/9980/sheep-cree ... ite-visit/
http://www.wildsnow.com/9962/caic-sheep ... annotated/
- Carl
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Re: Five killed in Loveland Pass Avalanche
That site visit by Lou is definitely worth a read
- dsunwall
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Re: Five killed in Loveland Pass Avalanche
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Re: Five killed in Loveland Pass Avalanche
I had hoped to visit the drainage this weekend, with hopes of learning how to avoid such a disaster, but didn't make it. BCA's blog did a visit and shared a powerful picture of one of the recovery sites. The size and power is just amazing to me. And it wasn't even a 'huge' avi. http://www.backcountryaccess.com/2013/0 ... nche-site/
Re: Five killed in Loveland Pass Avalanche
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"We knocked the bastard off." Hillary, 1953
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Couldn't we all use 50 years of humble growth?
"It is not the mountain we conquer but ourselves." Hillary, 2003
Couldn't we all use 50 years of humble growth?
- Vermont Mike
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Re: Five killed in Loveland Pass Avalanche
I went to high school with Ian Lamphere in Vermont, and while I never knew him well he and his brother (not involved in the accident) seemed like great people. RIP to those killed, and condolences to their families.
- rickinco123
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Re: Five killed in Loveland Pass Avalanche
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Re: Five killed in Loveland Pass Avalanche
I visited the slide area this weekend to gain some understanding and pay respects at the memorial shrine. Its a short walk from the hairpin curve. The shrine was a white cross, flowers, couple beer cans and many farewell messages, some written into the snow. I didnt venture out into the gully itself due to possible new instabilitiies from the rapid melting. Many of the avalanche features are melting away. A couple dozen other people walked by too.