Monday, January 25, 2010

Wolf Creek Slide

On 1.24.10 we triggered a pretty sizable avalanche while backcountry skiing at wolf creek pass.  Everyone wants to hear all the details, so here it goes...


Wolf Creek Pass had gotten approximately 65" in 4 days, but the storm had passed and it was beautiful out, still winds and blue skies.  We began from the trailhead near the pass summit and skinned to the bench between the two "radio tower" mountains (no idea what the locals call them).  From here we cut right and headed for the southern radio tower mountain.  The bowl that drops off to climber's left has everything from northeast to south-facing terrain and about 600' elevation loss.  We had been assessing the snowpack during the approach; there was about 3' of light powder from the big storm, on top of the old base, which seemed to be pretty variable in terms of thickness and density.  Below the old base layer was a layer of hoar, of variable depth.  From the top of the bowl we picked what we thought would be the safest line, a spine with trees, and traversed to the drop-in.  We dug two reusch block pits about 15 meters apart.  Both tests did show layer shear, but only after significant force was applied by the skier, and in more of a 'crumbly' rather than a 'clean-break' fashion.  We spent another few minutes ski-cutting the starting zone.  There were no signs of fracturing, no whoomping or settling, and minimal slough.  Of course we had been reading the Avy forecast and were wary, but we were surprised but the apparent stability of the snow, and made the decision to ski.  On our second run we worked our way clock-wise around the bowl to another spine.  On our third run we came counter-clockwise along the ridge and dropped into an east-facing slope, through some pretty thick trees.  

I skied first and then carried my speed across the gully and up the opposite side.  A minute later and I'm filming Vince.  I was so totally focused on keeping the camera steady and keeping Vince in the screen that I didn't notice the slide right away.  The first thing I recognized was this surreal noise, of all that snow moving, and a low-pitched rumble or drone.  Before I looked up from the viewfinder I realized what was happening.  I ditched the camera (after pushing 'stop' apparently) and made to kick turn and traverse away (hopefully far away).  I turned uphill and yelled at Vince, who was cruising to a stop above me.  He didn't realize yet what was going on.  It was difficult to judge how far the snow would run up the opposite hill, and for a second I panicked.  Another couple seconds and it was obvious that the main flow of snow would miss us both, which was sweet.  Below find links to some pictures of the slide and the starting zone, etc.

The slope of this bowl is about 35 degrees in most spots.  The slide was triggered by our second skier on our third run of the day.  The main crown looks to have run to the ground, the picture is about 30 meters looker's left of our drop-in spot.  We estimated the crown at 100 meters wide.  Interesting to note that it triggered fairly late in Vince's run.  You can see in the video that the trees on this run are fairly thick, and I always equate tight trees with improved safety in my mind, but that was obviously not the case on this day.  




Video (watch it in HD!)


I have more footage and I'll try to get it up soon.


8 comments:

  1. I'm glad no one was hurt. And now you have cool avalanche footage!

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  2. We searched for you for 45 minutes. I'm sure you were more scared than we were but we thought we were going to find bodies. We had been up there earlier and when we got up there again and saw the slide aftermath, we thanked God we had previously chosen not to take that line. Then we realized the slide could've happened just a few minutes before we got there and felt like we had to search. We didn't see how it would have been possible to ski out of that thing. So we dropped the cornice on skier's right of the bowl (which we'd evaluated and ridden safely earlier that day), then traversed over and searched with three beacons, covering virtually the entire debris field, until it started getting dark and we figured anyone in there was dead. With great relief, we found no cars in the lot besides our own when we returned to the Lobo lot. I'm so glad that no one was hurt. Please feel free to call if you'd like to discuss further. Alex 858.761.3347

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  3. Me and my crew came upon that slide and searched for nearly an hour! You guys are lucky. You were definately pushing you luck on that slope that day. In no way could those trees have been considered safe. If you evaluated that slope as safe you are highly confused!

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  4. I was the 3rd member of the party that rode that monster prior to you. Thank God your alive! I'd like to thank our leader for proper route selection. He determined that there was an extremely high slide potential for that particular aspect. Praise God for your level head Paul.

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  5. thansk for sharing this with us, Im glad it turned out ok. I was riding in that terrain a week prior to the big storm. Can you show me on google maps where the slide occured?

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  6. edit, nevermind, just looked at the picasa album

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  7. That is one of the best snowboarding videos I've ever seen. That must have been a rush. I used it on one of my web pages and put a link to this page for people to read. I actually made a magazine cover of the event. If you're interested in seeing the page, please let me know. I don't want to put it here, so I don't come across as spreading spam.

    Thanks so much!!

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  8. I don't think god had much to do with it. The conditions were set and you flat out ignored them. LISTEN TO THE AVY REPORT!!! if it says don't go out, don't go the fuck out. Time and time again there's always a group of idiots that think that they know better than the guys who do this for a living. Patrollers, ski school and all manner of ski professionals, and they always get proven wrong. (last year it was a patroller who got killed up around here).

    Go get the book 'surviving in avalanche terrain' and read the statistics. It will shock you how long your lifespan is when you start crossing slopes that have a tendency to slide. As the years tick by your chance of survival gets smaller and smaller very quickly.

    We all like to have fun, but just don't be a freakin idiot about it.

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