You're trying to answer a question that doesn't need to be asked.
You're trying to answer a question that doesn't need to be asked.
Thanks for the thoughtful and informative response. A big part of what would make a phone app useful (if not absolutely impossible) is that the rest of the posse could all turn theirs to find in that event. I agree though the odds of people knowing how to do that are low even if the capability existed.
But, because it's been deemed impossible for a ski app to send a decent pusle while on and even if it could nobody would know how to turn theirs to seek when needed it will never happen.
And, because according to the collective here, there is no better solution to not requiring people to wear actual tested equipment anywhere but Bridger or educate folks better we can just blame Darwin every time something like this happens. which is pretty much what a lot of you seem to be doing rather than suggest changes or improvements to things as is.
I have a hunch that due to climate change, the freeze/thaw and rain vs snow cycles are getting a lot more chaotic, making management and control even more difficult going forward.
Go that way really REALLY fast. If something gets in your way, TURN!
I am unaware of any phone app or any smart phone having any of the capabilities that you seem to think exist.
Look, I’m open to discussing things, but you’ve been told, by informed people, why a phone avy app is technically and socially infeasible and impractical, but you reacted by shrilly mocking and accusing those people of being uncaring and/or ignorant of the need. And you are wrong to do that on both counts.
I skied the living shit out of all that terrain in all kinds of conditions before I even knew what a beacon was. You might hit your head on a tree. You might get buried.
We may someday reach a stage where the heat-seeking drone just zips from the patrol shack and hauls ass to hover right over the avy victim. Honestly, with respect to the deceased and what must be some heartbroken and exhausted tsv patrollers, I'm not 100% sure that's the world I want to live in.
Somebody go find the porron and pour that bitch out for the fellas eh?
What, if anything can be done to increase the awareness and increase the number of people procuring and using better equipment when and where they should? I like Bridger's model. Any thoughts on deploying that elsewhere? Nobody seems to be suggesting that we work to improve the in bounds terrain precautions. Certainly seems uncaring to just mock and talk down to me for suggesting we look for solutions.
Go that way really REALLY fast. If something gets in your way, TURN!
Ever had your iPhone brick on you in cold temps? (There’s a reason beacons don’t use lithium ion batteries)
I ski 135 degree chutes switch to the road.
Go that way really REALLY fast. If something gets in your way, TURN!
No one is suggesting it because ski patrols and mountain ops already do this every day, all winter, every winter.
They even think about it in the summer, too. Write papers on it and go to conferences and shit. Not just re-ask the same question after educated, experienced professionals give them an honest, accurate answer why something won't work, which is what you're doing.
We all love chewing the fat, but this is not a new topic in the industry, and there is a solid conclusion that cell phones should not and will not replace a beacon. Everyone has said it, and Bunion has said it best, and not just once:
People who have such strong opinions about avalanche risk and recovery should take a fucking L1 class before thinking they are smarter than an entire fucking industry of really dedicated folks.With proper mitigation of the avalanche hazard it is generally safe > 99% of the time.
It is skiing, even without the danger of avalanches, skiing on slopes steeper than 33 degrees is risky and there is always a chance that you could be hurt/killed.
No one forces you to ski that terrain, it is a decision that you make knowing there is risk involved. I willingly accept that risk and do not expect that it can ever be 100% safe. I do get concerned when people who have never done avalanche mitigation work decide that the Industry needs to fix something that already works very well. Can Avalanche mitigation be safer? Yes. And there are a lot of really smart people who have that as their focus in life.
Meanwhile, maybe it would be best for people to keep in mind that if they want to ski steep and snow covered terrain no one is forcing them to do so.
We're all glad you're in this discussion, but you're proving that you're out of your element, Donny. Read more, learn more, listen more, go skiing more.
I think the potato gun proved the stability.
Originally Posted by blurred
I'm a pro patroller at an area that has an active avalanche mitigation program as well as inbounds avalanche terrain. While I have never seen a post control slide bury a guest, I have had several instances where guests have gone into tree wells on deep days and if they were wearing a beacon the recovery time would have been MUCH quicker.
Thanks I think I get that..
Well, last comment here most likely. To be crystal clear, I've said countless times that I'm not suggesting that a phone app would ever be superior or even comparable to a piece of equipment designed specifically for this purpose. What I suggested was that even a half assed pinger running with the popular ski apps many tourists now use might save someone if their friends could turn theirs to seek/find when the unexpected event happens.. and that odds of them knowing how to do so would be low.
Is the main problem here that too many people would use the half assed background phone app as a substitute or excuse NOT to procure the real equipment necessary and venture in to a lot riskier terrain with only the phone? So the likelihood of fools thinking they don't need a beacon in regularly risky terrain and getting in trouble outweighs the utility that a half assed peripheral platform might save someone who wouldn't likely be under the impression that they need anything at all in that regard??
Go that way really REALLY fast. If something gets in your way, TURN!
Please. Just. Stop.
I ski 135 degree chutes switch to the road.
We could use Ogre around here from time to time too, particularly in Tech Talk. Fuckin' nerds everywhere. [end threadjacking]
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