Results 51 to 64 of 64
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12-16-2005, 10:30 AM #51Originally Posted by homerjay
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12-16-2005, 10:36 AM #52
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12-16-2005, 11:51 AM #53drowning
- Join Date
- Oct 2003
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- the Quagmire
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Originally Posted by El Chupacabra
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12-16-2005, 12:35 PM #54Originally Posted by homerjay
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12-20-2005, 07:34 PM #55Originally Posted by SherpaStyle
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12-20-2005, 08:07 PM #56
A few years ago, I spent 20 minutes that felt like about 20 hours extricating myself from a treewell. With Mr.AG and Rotney standing probably 50 yards away, and they couldn't hear my screams for help. I could hear them talking about a porcupine they saw up in a tree, carrying on a conversation and wondering where I was. Which I think was the most terrifying part - I knew they were close but they couldn't hear me at all under the snow. We bought whistles after that.
But what the hell. We all own them, why not wear them when conditions are even a little questionable?"Life should not be a journey to the grave with the intention of arriving safely in a pretty and well preserved body, but rather to skid in broadside, thoroughly used up, totally worn out, and loudly proclaiming, "Wow, what a Ride!"
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12-20-2005, 09:19 PM #57
This year I am going to wear my beacon inbounds skiing Fernie. There are two patrol huts (high elevation on the mountain) on the Timber and Lizard sides of the mountain and all patroll are packing all the gear when on duty. Even if they open an area, I am still skiing in avalanche terrain. If something slides inbounds, patroll can respond in minutes. I would rather take my chances with a beacon than the RECCO system. Sometimes conditions change pretty fast on a powder day or when it starts to snow, and it only can take a run or two before patroll closes an area on the hill.
On days when I hook up with friends for laps into fish bowl, I (and my friends) will be fully equiped."A lack of planning and preparation on your part does not make it an emergency on my part."
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12-21-2005, 12:53 AM #58Originally Posted by cololi
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01-04-2006, 12:13 PM #59
I am surprised no one has mentioned the slide at A-Basin that killed someone on May 20th last year? That scenario pretty much proves that you never know when it is going to hit you. Spring Skiing inbounds? The rescue party started immediately, but it still took them 30 minutes to find the guy. Not to say that he didn't die from other trauma that a becaon would have helped with (the official report never said if he sufficated), but after even 30 minutes your chances are pretty much 0 regardless.
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01-04-2006, 06:34 PM #60
I wear mine on any day that isn't dedicated to the park or groomers (those days when everything is ice and there is nothing else to do). I almost always ride with a pack with probe and shovel. Even when solo. Beeping when I'm solo is mostly about body recovery, so my family can have a proper funeral if it comes to that.
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01-10-2006, 04:35 AM #61
This concept of inbounds and out of bounds is something that us Euros often have difficulty coming to terms with. If you ignore those definitions and accept that ski patrol can only make safe a certain percentage of potentially dangerous terrain, it'll change the way you look at the ski area. Think of the groomers as snaking through a bunch of backcountry and you'll probably be safer. If you've invested in a beacon, wear it.
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01-10-2006, 07:35 AM #62
roo, that's the clearest thing i've heard on this board in a while. just a week ago at the bird we had atleast 4 skier triggered slides were no laughing matter. there's a lot of terrain to cover and during a windy storm the conditions change too quick for patrol to cut everything. they count on skiers to break up the slabs before they form.
in short, if you got one why not use it.
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01-10-2006, 10:40 PM #63
As I mentioned in post #28 in this thread, feel free to find out about the inbounds sz 3.0 natural in Fernie 060108. Really good time to be wearing your transceiver if you were skiing in the Lizard Bowl around 3:30 pm. The patrol bombs the living piss out of those start zones and closes vast amounts of terrain too, even with as little as 10 cm of accumulated snow after explosive control, yet people continue to bitch and moan that nothing's open, or even worse, poach the closures. Some even have the audacity to keep complaining about it after a huge avalanche rips into open terrain that any reasonable avalanche forecaster would have opened in the same circumstances. Hey, shit happens boys and girls, and usually when you're least expecting it to. Mother Nature is the last person you should be thinking you can fool. Again, if you own a transceiver, why would you not be transmitting at all times when you're out skiing? Batteries are cheap, life is not. Thankfully, no one was killed. The 100's of people who poached that same signline the day before should be counting their lucky stars right about now, and vowing to themselves never to poach a signline again, no matter how great the allure of powder. I wonder how many of them were wearing transceivers?
"if it's called tourist season, why can't we just shoot them?"
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01-17-2006, 08:08 AM #64Originally Posted by bad_roo
Tignes Avalanche
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