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The Season is HERE!!!!
Well we havent started the season off the way we did
last year but hey we are finnally gettin it!
Tentative Utah Mountain Resort Opening
Dates
Alta...Nov 17
Beaver Mountain...TBA
Brian Head Resort...week of Thanksgiving
Brighton ... Nov 17
The Canyons ... Nov 19
Deer Valley ... Dec 3
Park City Mountain Resort... Nov 19
Powder Mountain ... Mid-Nov
Snowbasin ... Nov 24
Snowbird...Nov 19
Solitude ... Nov 21
Sundance ... Dec 9
Wolf Mountain...Dec 17
Avalanche Risk Reduction Methods
http://www.pistehors.com/
A few days ago we skied a slope in the Bauges called the dent
d’Arclusaz. There had been around 60cm of fresh snow earlier
in the week and our route raised some eyebrows.
One person sent this comment:
“I noticed that you toured the east face of the Dent d’Arclusaz
last Thursday. Knowing that the angle is more than 40° on
this large slope and the risk was around 3 to 4 in the Bauges
(I didn’t check the bulletin) I wonder how you decided this
outing was safe? I don’t want to criticize anyone but personally
wouldn’t feel safe tackling that sort of route with the
risks, I would like to know what elements you used to decide if
the slope was safe?”
MORE...
It is an excellent question and highlights the dangers of the
Internet. There are many sites and forums where trip reports are
published. Just because someone tackled a route does not mean
that it was safe or that it will be safe a few hours or days later
when conditions may have evolved considerably. Despite the headlines
avalanche deaths are relatively rare. Swiss Avalanche Researcher
Werner Munter calculated that was 1 death per 50,000 skier days
in Switzerland during the 1990s. Apart from the conditions there
may be a variety of reasons why one group got away with skiing
and slope when another gets caught. Group management, skiing ability
etc can all make a big difference. So a big warning, unless you
know the professional background of someone making comments on
the conditions: guide, avalanche educator etc. be sceptical about
what they say. This applies no matter how good a skier or boarder
they are.
Back to our question. This is the avalanche bulletin published
by Météo France the night before our trip. I’ve
extracted the parts relevant to the Bauges and that apply to the
slope which, except for the last few meters, is below 2000 meters
altitude. It is very important not to make your decision based
on just the headline risk, 1 to 5, but to look into the details
of the current bulletin. As one guide has remarked, “globablly
conditions are good but locally there is a risk of death”.
It is also important to have followed the evolution of snow conditions
over the season. For example this year the snowpack has been very
thin at altitude on many slopes which accelerated the formation
of a weak snow layer called depth hoar on northern slopes. Each
snowfall has frequently been accompanied by strong winds.
Avalanche Bulletin for the Savoie for the 17/2/2005 (N73160211)
published on 16/2 at 4pm.
Bauges – Considerable Risk – level 3
Zero Isotherm: valleys
-10C Isotherm: around 1800 rising to 2600 m
Wind at 3000 meters: North to East 10 to 60 km/h
Snow conditions
Little natural activity, many slopes sensitive to load
Over the last 24 hours 10 to 15cm of snow had fallen in the Bauges.
There has
been between 25 to 65cm of fresh snow over the last week at 1500
to 2000 m.
With the cold this snow will stabilize slowly. Below 2000 to 2200
meters the
accidental risk involves mainly the surface layer. The rising
north wind and the
fresh powder could form some new more or less soft surface slabs,
largely on
ridges and passes. These could be triggered by a small extra load.
A big extra
load could cause a full depth avalanche. Natural activity is not
to be ignored
given the wind that can load certain zones, the sun during the
day and the slow
settling of the snowpack. This could cause surface or even full
depth slides on
steep slopes on all aspects and altitudes.
Whenever you see an avalanche risk of 3 (considerable) you should
be thinking about route decisions, timing, weather and the strengths
and weaknesses of your group. I noticed a couple of trips over
the weekend on a route that has seen several dramas over the years.
The participants commented on the whiteout conditions. If there
was an accident the rescue operation would be complicated by such
conditions. In his book: Extreme Mountain Rescue, Marcel Pérès
describes an incident on the Cime de la Jasse in 1997. It took
the rescue effort 2 days just to locate the avalanche. Another
example, late in the afternoon on the 17th of February, 2005 three
snowboarders, trapped in the cliff complexes of the Grandes Rousses
had to be rescued on foot when poor weather blocked the Sécurité
Civile helicopter in its base close to Grenoble.
So looking at the bulletin the risk could have been reduced by
travelling earlier in the day before the slopes are warmed, choosing
routes that don’t have too much fresh snow, a shoulder for
example, keeping below 2000 meters and taking care close to ridges
where slabs may have formed. Group spacing and skiing one at a
time would also be a good idea. Our route also has little exposure
so a surface slide will have less serious consequences. The run
out is also fairly gentle, normally avalanches stop on the slope
itself although a full depth slide could still bank up a large
depth of snow. The main thing our route does not have in its favour
is the steepness.
There are a number of methods for managing avalanche risks, for
example: Munter 3x3, Nivotest, Stop Go, Red/Green Light. These
take statistical information about avalanches, slope angle, group
size, slope aspect etc. and apply them to a particular group,
route and conditions in an attempt to give a simple go / no go
answer. They are increasingly used by guides and group leaders.
Note that the statistical basis of these methods varies depending
on the mountain ranges. An obvious example, in the Southern Hemisphere
it is South sector slopes that have greater avalanche risk.
One of the easiest methods to apply is Werner Munter’s
Reduction Method (Munter is also behind the more detailed 3x3
method). The idea is to take the headline avalanche risk and reduce
it to an acceptable level. It relies on detailed sector avalanche
bulletins that are available in Europe. In France you really do
have to look into the nitty-gritty of the bulletin for your route
choice not just take the departmental risk level. Munter believes
that his method could half the number of avalanche deaths.
The Reduction Method says:-
Risk = Danger ÷ (RF1 * RF2 * RF3).
The danger is taken from the avalanche bulletin scale. Statistically
each increment represents a doubling of the danger starting from
2. The figure for the Bauges is 3, this gives us a danger level
of 8. The Reduction Method is not appropriate to avalanche levels
4 and 5.
We now have three classes of reduction factor to mitigate this
risk. Only if we can bring the risk level below 1 is the route
thought safe enough to risk travel.
First Class, Slope Angle
Steepest Slope Angle is between 35°-39° : 2
Steepest Slope Angle is between 30°-34° : 4
Second Class, Slope Aspect
Route avoids North sector slopes (NW-N-NE) : 2
Route avoids North half sector slopes (WNW-N-ENE) : 3
Route avoids Named Avalanche Slope Sectors : 4
Third Class, Group Factors
Slope stabilized by skiing: 2
Large group with good spacing: 2
Small Group (2 to 4 skiers) : 2
Small Group with good spacing: 3
Our first route choice was the “Pan de Rideau”, however
part of slope is more than 39 degrees so there is no reduction.
Munter adds a number of special cases. If the risk is considerable
at least one first class factor must apply. In this case our initial
route is judged too dangerous to ski by this method.
There is a slight variant from the same summit. The steepest
section between 35°-39°. The variant is east facing but
the bulletin notes the possibility of surface or even full depth
slides on steep slopes on all aspects and altitudes. Again there
is a special rule, if the avalanche bulletin declares all aspects
(or aspects apart from North half sector slopes) as dangerous
then no second class reduction factor can be used. This is often
the case when the snowpack is wet, when there is a lot of fresh
snow or late in the season when there has been no overnight freeze/thaw
cycle.
Here we have a grey area, the bulletin doesn’t specify
what they mean by a steep slope, they also suggest that this danger
is greatest later in the day as slopes warm. Maybe they have snow
sluffs in mind? In this case we will apply the reduction factor
of 3. Finally the group is small and we will allow good spacing
giving us another reduction of 3.
Risk = 8 / 1 x 3 x 3 = 8/9.
A risk of less than one is considered okay to proceed, with caution,
but remember what we said about advice on the Web!
Risk Reduction Methods get backcountry travellers to think about
route choices and how they can reduce risks by adding more safety
factors. Remember that even if Munter’s Reduction Method
was universally applied, it would only half the number of avalanche
deaths. It is a statistical method which summarizes general wisdom
about avalanche accidents but ignores detailed local conditions.
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