PDA

View Full Version : Avalanche kills seven Czech mountaineers in Slovakia (warning: disturbing pics)



f2f
01-22-2006, 06:34 PM
it happened on new year's eve, but i didn't see it discussed here. seems like they exercised poor judgement staying overnight right on the avalanche slope. the pictures can be a good, scary warning:

http://i.idnes.cz/05/124/maxi/NEL100e7b_lavina01.JPG

http://i.idnes.cz/05/124/maxi/NEL100e7c_lavina02.JPG

http://i.idnes.cz/05/124/maxi/NEL100e7d_lavina04.JPG

http://img.radio.cz/pictures/ctk0601/lavina.jpg

at the bottom is an attached pic -- the place they camped.

an article from Radio Prague:

The very last day of 2005 brought unexpected tragedy to the High Tatra Mountains in Slovakia. Seven Czech climbers died in the early hours on Saturday when an avalanche buried their tents. Only one of the eight-member group managed to dig himself out of the snow and run for help. But it was too late and mountain rescue teams retrieved the dead bodies of six men and one woman in their 20s and 30s. The tragedy raised the death toll of Czech tourists in the High Tatras to twelve in the past year.

Czech mountaineers accounted for half of all casualties in the Slovak High Tatras in 2005. The year before, eleven Czechs were killed in the Tatra Mountains. According to local rescuers, Czech tourists tend to underestimate the danger and often ignore regulations, for example by not reporting to the rescue service before they set off on a hike. A combination of these factors probably led to Saturday's tragedy, too. Tomas Frank is a safety expert from the Czech Mountaineering Association.
"As far as I know the group built their tents in an unsuitable location - right on an avalanche slope. They underestimated or perhaps were ignorant of potential risks and this played a key role in the accident."

At the time there was a high avalanche alert. According to Tomas Frank, the High Tatras are the most avalanche-prone mountain range in Central Europe and every year report more deaths than the Alps. The Tatra Mountains are very popular with Czech climbers and off-piste skiers, and attract both experienced mountaineers, who undertake very demanding hikes, and beginners, who often underestimate the risks. That is why the Slovak range has such a large share in the overall number of Czech casualties worldwide.
High Tatras
"Every year around 30 Czechs die in mountains around the world. Every big tragedy gets a lot of attention and raises the toll suddenly. The death toll on Saturday was the highest since 1970. Last year five people died in a similar accident in Kyrgyzstan. A few years ago five climbers were killed in the Caucasus. Despite those cases, the statistics remain roughly the same every year, and I don't think the numbers of Czechs killed in the mountains are extremely high."
The Czech Mountaineering Association has around 10,000 members, most of whom have undergone at least some basic safety and survival training - which, unlike before 1989, is not compulsory. But as Tomas Frank says, no training can guarantee one hundred percent safety - the mountains can be unpredictable and people do make mistakes.

FogHorn
01-22-2006, 06:57 PM
Tragic -- Let this be a lesson for the rest of us !
- there is a reason why there are no trees in that gully

NoKnees
01-23-2006, 01:10 PM
Any loss of life is disturbing on some level, but this... I mean, are those black dots on the photo where people actually setup camp, not just traveled, during a period of "High" Avy danger?

Ignorance of the basics is not a good way to die. Defintely a waste of life...

f2f
01-23-2006, 01:55 PM
here's the story, roughly translated:

- the 7 guys and one girl didn't tell anyone where they were going for fear that they wouldn't be allowed.

- they started climbing and at 15:00h on the 30th decide to set up camp where the hand is pointing in the picture above. the camp is at 1600m above sea level.

- the next day they wake up with 20cm of fresh snow and start climbing up (without backpacks, for some reason!) they couldn't get very far because of the snow (reach ~1900m) and get back to the camp. at 15:00h on the 31st they have arrived. it keeps snowing but nobody ever thinks that there may be a problem with that.

- at 5:30h the avalanche strikes. the crown is about 100m wide. the only guy who survived is in a tent with 2 other people. the tent gets torn by a branch and he manages somehow to dig himself out.

- he starts digging with no tools and lightly dressed, but gives up rather quickly and goes out for help

- gets the rescue back to the spot rather quickly, spots his own tent and everybody digs it out fast. they try reviving the two people unsuccessfully

- the other 5 people are found with dogs (what you see on the pictures above)

- the search group was composed of 17 professional resquers, 29 volunteers, 8 dogs and two helicopters (one of which came from Poland)

the two black dots are, apparently, where the avalanche started and where it ended. the avalanche travelled more than 600 vertical meters, from ~1800m above sea level to 1200m. at the end, the avalanche cone covers an area of 350m by 30m

NoKnees
01-23-2006, 02:00 PM
Thanks... Hopefully someone, somewhere, learns something from this. However people shouldn't need to die on a regular basis for these particular lessons to be taught.

altaski
01-24-2006, 06:52 PM
Wow I think you can hardly call them "mountaineers" when they set up camp right in a HUGE avalanche path. Im sorry its sad they died and all but what the fuck were they thinking camping there?

kailas
01-26-2006, 07:42 AM
Obviously they were not mountaineers!!

bklyn
01-26-2006, 08:19 AM
Sad - even though they know they are going for a recovery mission, there is clear disappointment on every rescuers face when it's clear the victim is dead.



http://img.radio.cz/pictures/ctk0601/lavina.jpg


How long does one last in a SAR job before you're too burn out by the carnage?