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  1. #101
    spook Guest
    Quote Originally Posted by RaisingArizona View Post
    Hindsight Bias, "The I knew it all along phenomenon", The tendency to believe that after learning an outcome, that one would have foreseen it.

    if i'm not mistaken, several of the people involved at tunnel creek -- the snowboarders -- expressed concern at least to each other about what was going to happen and took another route. i'm talking about something that should be obvious. like i said, a lot of these reports involve clear breakdowns of basic protocols.

  2. #102
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    Quote Originally Posted by spook View Post
    i haven't had time to look at those yet, but i was speaking about the "human factor" in particular. i don't see why there's a problem saying the human factor is someone fucking up. sure, i'm a casual dick tracey with a growing interest. but i haven't read too many reports in here where everybody was like "oh nobody could have seen that coming." in fact, it seems most of the time to be the exact opposite, that the errors are glaring. obviously, i'm oversimplifying but in the end somebody's dead, others are sad and regretful, and often lingering is the sense of if only, which is not usually finished by something drastic and miraculous, but something simple, like, if i'd only said something or if we'd only not willfully ignored this or that.

    i don't even hear "yes, we knew the risk and took it."
    "Human factors" is shorthand in risk management, or whatever you want to call it, for mistakes that humans tend to make because of the way we make decisions, or see or fail to see things. It's one thing to say that people shouldn't screw up. It's another more subtle thing to recognize that there are certain ways in which people tend to (for example) get channeled in their decision making such that by the time they think they are making a final decision, that decision has already been influenced badly by previous decisions that they weren't even aware they were making at the time. The "heuristic traps" paper by McCammon is technical but worth reading if you haven't: http://www.avalanche.org/moonstone/D...%20reprint.pdf

    I am no avalanche/snow expert but pay attention to this as well because I'm interested in failure analysis. The way that human factors and group dynamics play in has some parallels, for example, in air crew decision making, where there was a problem with crew being unwilling to challenge the captain's authority, and there is something called "crew resource management" which tries to make an explicit framework for group decisions: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crew_resource_management The parallel of these case studies to groups in BC situations like Tunnel Creek should be pretty clear. Similar things (usually without fatal consequence thankfully, but expensive) can happen in large science/engineering projects which is where my professional interest is.

    Edit: posted at the same time as spook's last. IMO the aircrew examples are very instructive on human factors, because you can't blame air crashes on being blinded by powder fever. None of those people wanted to crash airplanes, yet they made bad decisions despite extensive training.

  3. #103
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    BUMP

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    This year there seems to be some examples per the OP's concern.

    Perhaps the Avalanche Danger Scale should be changed to read:

    Extreme --> Extreme and Ongoing
    High --> Certain
    Considerable --> Very Likely
    Moderate --> Likely
    Low --> Sometimes

    I just don't see the relationship between Moderate and 'heightened avalanche conditions'. Perhaps also, the Low description should not have "Generally safe avalanche conditions" in the description and should also be changed to use a question mark '?' instead of a checkmark -- a question mark being more in line with the 'watch' part of the advisory.
    OH, MY GAWD! ―John Hillerman  Big Billie Eilish fan.
    But that's a quibble to what PG posted (at first, anyway, I haven't read his latest book) ―jono
    we are not arguing about ski boots or fashionable clothing or spageheti O's which mean nothing in the grand scheme ― XXX-er

  4. #104
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    Or a backcountry skier could realized the limitation of any hazard rating system, understand that this is serious business, real the full report and discussion daily and practice consistent conservative decision making.

    Whenever there is a run of fatalities, the conversation is alway lean towards "What needs to change so this doesn't happen". We look for a magic solution. There is nothing wrong with this line of thinking. That said, my biggest take awesome is I have to be awesome everyday. I can't fuck up. That's the sport.

  5. #105
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    IMO the CAIC had been using considerable too extensively in recent years and have numbed many to its meaning. Perhaps splitting hairs but they used to have the old moderate with pockets of considerable, which IMO is more what they mostly meant, but the pockets was dropped. So when folks go out and mostly see moderate like conditions under a considerable rating they learn to discount considerable.

    Under the current color scheme I’d rate it high at the moment in the northern mtns when they have considerable.

    But yeah as foggy says, ultimately its up to us to keep the tips up so to speak regardless of the rating.


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    Quote Originally Posted by Benny Profane View Post
    Keystone is fucking lame. But, deadly.

  6. #106
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    Quote Originally Posted by Kinnikinnick View Post
    IMO the CAIC had been using considerable too extensively in recent years and have numbed many to its meaning. Perhaps splitting hairs but they used to have the old moderate with pockets of considerable, which IMO is more what they mostly meant, but the pockets was dropped. So when folks go out and mostly see moderate like conditions under a considerable rating they learn to discount considerable.

    Under the current color scheme I’d rate it high at the moment in the northern mtns when they have considerable.

    But yeah as foggy says, ultimately its up to us to keep the tips up so to speak regardless of the rating.


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    With the potential for large numbers of clueless newcomers in the backcountry, it becomes difficult to express hazards which involve spatial variability in a single rating, because said newcomers can’t make the necessary distinctions. As their goal becomes limiting fatalities rather than just conveying information, reports trend towards propaganda, and therefore lose credibility and are somewhat disregarded by experienced skiers, exacerbating the potential for overconfidence in one’s judgement, which becomes yet another heuristic trap to be wary of. I read avalanche ratings Iike I read multiple weather reports, knowing that what really matters is what I find at a particular place and time.

  7. #107
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    OK, so let's post the COMPLETE danger rating scale that includes likelihood, size, and distribution descriptors, because these are important when forecasters are selecting their rating.

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    I think the idea that forecasters (CAIC in particular, I'm not really familiar enough with any other forecast center to judge) intentionally "pad" their danger ratings to make it scarier for newcomers or whatever is mostly a myth. Avalanche forecasting, like travel in the backcountry, is fraught with uncertainty and subject to human error. There's also the limitations posed by forecasting for very large geographic areas and creating a forecast that adequately covers many different microclimates.

    There are two misconceptions about avalanche danger ratings that I see a lot:
    1) that it is a binary description, when it is actually a scale. You could be at the low end of Considerable or the high end of Moderate
    2) that it is a linear scale when actually it is an exponential scale. See here: https://cbavalanchecenter.org/what-i...erable-danger/

    They did away with "pockets of" because it wasn't really necessary. Considerable states the following:
    Travel advice: Careful Snowpack evaluation, cautious route-finding and conservative decision making essential.
    Likelihood of Avalanches: natural avalanches possible, human triggered avalanches likely.
    Avalanche size and distribution: small avalanches in many areas, large avalanches in specific areas, or very large avalanches in isolated areas.

    When you REALLY dig into the specifics of the danger scale, the ratings we see make more sense. "Moderate with pockets of Considerable" is not needed because Considerable covers that condition adequately with "large avalanches in specific areas." One has to recognize that not ALL of the descriptors for a particular danger rating must be present, and if on the edge between two danger ratings, the forecaster is generally going to go with the rating that conveys the travel advice they feel is appropriate for the day.

    Are there days that the forecaster gets it wrong, or that conditions in the specifc area I'm traveling don't match the danger rating? Of course! But when you really dig into the danger scale and what the ratings mean, I think they get it right a lot more often than not.

  8. #108
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    The idea that a single rating is all you need for an area that is hundreds of square miles, and that if they just improved that rating system we'd be safer, is absurd. The rating is useful, sure, but "fixing" the rating system -- whatever that means -- won't make a damn bit of difference at keeping people safer.
    "fuck off you asshat gaper shit for brains fucktard wanker." - Jesus Christ
    "She was tossing her bean salad with the vigor of a Drunken Pop princess so I walked out of the corner and said.... "need a hand?"" - Odin
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  9. #109
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    All excellent points.

    For every avalanche advisory from every center: It is a forecast, not an aftercast, no matter what words are used it is still up to the user to make appropriate decisions and to obtain the required education and experience to make those decisions. Or there is always Golf or Bowling or maybe water color painting.
    I have been in this State for 30 years and I am willing to admit that I am part of the problem.

    "Happiest years of my life were earning < $8.00 and hour, collecting unemployment every spring and fall, no car, no debt and no responsibilities. 1984-1990 Park City UT"

  10. #110
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    I'm sure research has been done on how to best reach multiple audiences with an avy forecast. Every aspect of the reports we read are intentional.

    That said, I like this:

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    from this:



    But I don't expect forecasts to be written for me. They are also written for pros and jongs.

  11. #111
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    That's a cool way of looking at it ISBD. Thanks for the link.

  12. #112
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    Someone else shared the vid recently. Don't remember who.

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  13. #113
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    Interesting hearing all these opinions. Its going to take me awhile to digest them all.
    "True love is much easier to find with a helicopter"

  14. #114
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    Smile

    Quote Originally Posted by Hacksaw View Post
    Interesting hearing all these opinions. Its going to take me awhile to digest them all.
    This conversation is pretty cool. I know you are nerding out on the deets, but

    For the noobs, I would like to emphasize this, "what really matters is what I find at a particular place and time." and add in that it is SO IMPORTANT to be intimate with your own location. What is your backyard? Own it! Know exactly what the pack looks like and how it will ski over course of the season.

    Por ejemplo, here's my little go-to spot on the solo with the dog on keep-it-safe deeper midwinter days, I still get in some silky steep/deep turns:
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    Maybe it's ghey, but I enjoy farming my own turns (with doggo) on that hill. I don't even have to start the truck, just walk over there from my house.
    Live each season as it passes; breathe the air, drink the drink, taste the fruit, and resign yourself to the influences of each.
    Henry David Thoreau

  15. #115
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    A &quot;Moderate&quot; discussion of the avalanche rating scale.

    I rarely look at the rating or rose. I read the discussion and relevant observations and use that in conjunction with my own observations for a given area and season.


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  16. #116
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    "I wasn't going to let Johnny ski the backcountry with friends but he said the avalanche rating was only 'moderate' so I made sandwiches and let him go."
    - Quoted from a mother at a MomSkis support group meeting.

    With both older and younger people hitting up the backcountry, it is inevitable that the rating systems will be reworked. Is there a better way to define risk and probability and danger than the system in use? I don't know.

    I think the industry should continually refine the alerts and systems. This is still early backcountry access compared to what will be in 10 to 15 years. Think 1000% growth in backcountry use and a much broader age range of participants. Think paid access and other administrative bureaucracies that will regulate access.

    The market for equipment, the participant profile, legal issues, and the way people communicate in 10 years will have as much to do with it as anything. Symbols and words will be used that have not been invented yet.

    Lastly, a built history of ratings, expeditions and outcomes will determine the level of awareness and amount of time and money spent on improving the warning and ratings systems.
    OH, MY GAWD! ―John Hillerman  Big Billie Eilish fan.
    But that's a quibble to what PG posted (at first, anyway, I haven't read his latest book) ―jono
    we are not arguing about ski boots or fashionable clothing or spageheti O's which mean nothing in the grand scheme ― XXX-er

  17. #117
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    I'll say it again, there is nothing wrong with the danger scale. There is no magic bullet to make the backcountry safer. Ski touring in an activity for rational people that can demonstrate consistently conservative decision making.

    I'm not sure where you live but here in Colorado we have one of the best avalanche centers anywhere. The forecast and discussion have been highlighting the DPS problem all season. The risks have been communicated, YouTubes have been made, its all over the news, people have been dying and yet yesterday people were doing incredible dumb shit.

  18. #118
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    Quote Originally Posted by Foggy_Goggles View Post
    I'll say it again, there is nothing wrong with the danger scale. There is no magic bullet to make the backcountry safer. Ski touring in an activity for rational people that can demonstrate consistently conservative decision making.

    I'm not sure where you live but here in Colorado we have one of the best avalanche centers anywhere. The forecast and discussion have been highlighting the DPS problem all season. The risks have been communicated, YouTubes have been made, its all over the news, people have been dying and yet yesterday people were doing incredible dumb shit.
    Agreed. Not trying to make a case for the whole experts vs. newbs thing, but the fatality yesterday in PC was a 31y/o "local" without a beacon. How anyone can not know about the danger in the BC right now is beyond me. The danger level was conservative on that slope yesterday. There are signs at the gate saying you can die. Ignorant people gonna be ignorant.

  19. #119
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    The common thread is shitty decision making. Not old not young. Not experienced or inexperienced.

    Where you want to call it Avalanche Education or not is open to debate. That said, this is the problem. I am frustrated because I don't understand and I don't think most educators do either. Perhaps some type of sit down/ case study with the close call participants might be helpful. This is why the rage call needs to be tempered. Only these people know where there brain was at and why. I think we need to tap into that to attempt to understand the disconnect.

  20. #120
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    at a certain point shouldnt you strive every day to be your own forecaster
    and use more than a 1 word adjective to describe the dangers the mountains and mother nature in a high risk activity?
    "When the child was a child it waited patiently for the first snow and it still does"- Van "The Man" Morrison
    "I find I have already had my reward, in the doing of the thing" - Buzz Holmstrom
    "THIS IS WHAT WE DO"-AML -ski on in eternal peace
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  21. #121
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    Quote Originally Posted by skifishbum View Post
    at a certain point shouldnt you strive every day to be your own forecaster
    and use more than a 1 word adjective to describe the dangers the mountains and mother nature in a high risk activity?
    Yeah, but that's old guy put in the time pie in the ski shit that only people like you and me do or have done. I don't disagree but I think that is part of the disconnect between those that have been self taught by years of experience, the for profit avalanche education community and the reality of how people's brains work today.

    I have no concrete answers but it seem like there is something about how the message is delivered that needs to change. We could kick our feet up in our recliners and talk about how all the young bucks are dumb asses but that would be both selfish and also missing the point.

  22. #122
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    I blame the immense increase in the popularity of rock climbing over the last 10 years.

    Joking aside, I think a contributing factor (particularly in continental snowpacks) is that people are really shitty and identifying potential avalanche terrain. My dad has been a lifelong skier, although never a backcountry skier, and sometimes I'll share links to avalanche reports with him if I find them interesting. I can't count how many times he's seen pictures and said "wow, I never would have guessed that it would be possible for something that flat/treed/short to avalanche."

    I received a similar reaction from a former coworker of mine in Washington state(who is an avid BC skier and former pro patroller at a resort with a robust avy mitigation program) when I would share avy reports from Colorado or Utah with him. "That slid?! I would have considered that a safe zone!"

    There's a perceived sense of safety that comes from skiing terrain that is well within one's abilities and where the risks of a tumble are minimal. Sure, the run you're on is no steeper than a blue square cruiser at most resorts, but in an uncontrolled environment, it's still a slope that is capable of sliding.

    To circle back around to my opening quip about climbing, I've noticed that among my friends who are avid climbers and skiers, there is a sense that if something isn't steep enough to fall off/down, then it is "safe."

  23. #123
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    Quote Originally Posted by glademaster View Post
    I blame the immense increase in the popularity of rock climbing over the last 10 years.
    there is much merit to this and i hadn't thought about it before but i think you are right.
    swing your fucking sword.

  24. #124
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    The Fin
    Cooke City
    1/8/2021
    Code
    ASu-R2-D2-O
    Elevation
    10000
    Aspect
    E
    Latitude
    45.00460
    Longitude
    -109.95800
    Notes

    On January 8, 2021 skiers triggered, were caught and injured in an avalanche on The Fin on Republic Mountain outside of Cooke City. They sustained serious injuries and were evacuated by helicopter.

    A group of six were on the way up when they triggered the avalanche. Three of them were caught and partially buried. One of the three was buried face down with their head below surface. Two of the three caught were injured. One that was partially buried had an airbag deployed, and another partially buried was the injured party that was flown out. The person partially buried face down was unconscious for a short time and able to ski out, although injured.

    We will post more details when they become available.
    Number of slides
    1
    Number caught
    3
    Number buried
    1
    Trigger
    Skier
    Trigger Modifier
    u-An unintentional release
    R size
    2
    D size
    2
    Bed Surface
    O - Old snow
    Images
    Skier triggered on Fin
    Single / Multiple / Red Flag
    Single Avalanche
    Advisory Year
    20-21
    +

    Leaflet | U.S. Department of the Interior | U.S. Geological Survey | Policies
    Skier triggered on Fin

    On January 8, 2021 a group of skiers triggered an avalanche on The Fin outside
    More
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    Anyone else look at this and ask, WTF?
    I have been in this State for 30 years and I am willing to admit that I am part of the problem.

    "Happiest years of my life were earning < $8.00 and hour, collecting unemployment every spring and fall, no car, no debt and no responsibilities. 1984-1990 Park City UT"

  25. #125
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    Quote Originally Posted by Foggy_Goggles View Post
    Or a backcountry skier could realized the limitation of any hazard rating system, understand that this is serious business, real the full report and discussion daily and practice consistent conservative decision making.

    Whenever there is a run of fatalities, the conversation is alway lean towards "What needs to change so this doesn't happen". We look for a magic solution. There is nothing wrong with this line of thinking. That said, my biggest take awesome is I have to be awesome everyday. I can't fuck up. That's the sport.
    I don't think anything has to change. Overall there isn't that many deaths per season, it's not nearly as dangerous as driving your car every day and we aren't going to stop people from making mistakes. We've all been there and fucked up at some point.
    dirtbag, not a dentist

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