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Revelstoke Avalanche

I want to hear the whole story. 4 seperate slides? During the whole day while riding? If so, how did you manage to set off another? Based on that how did you manage to get everybody involved in an avy? We don't have the details, but when that many avys have taken place and multiple people are buried, it sounds like alot of mistakes were made. Definitely want to get the whole story and glad that nobody was hurt.
First off, there were no mistakes made!!! two of us should be dead and are alive because of the heads of the two who were not burried, have a read. the outcome could not have been better.

I am not a man who expresses himself well in person, so I want to thank, from the bottom of my heart the two individuals who kept there wits about them (you know who you are Jeff and Randy, and my family is indebted to you) and were able to over come all ODDS to dig me and Riley out of our snow caskets. We were in frisby at the back in deadmans creek (maybe not the best decision!). Anyway we dropped in at 300pm bc thinking this may not be the best decision, got almost to the bottom and realized there was no safe way out the bottom. person x went a bit further and lost his nuts, decided it was best to dig in and try to come out the top. I removed my pack and helmet and proceeded hike down to help turn his sled around. We turned his sled around and as he regained his breath I began to hike back up. he hit the throttle and begin his minny adventure back up. Randy made it 50 yards and the slope broke, we all thought,"wow get the cameras this is going to be funny", then the slope fractured above him!!! I had literally 2 seconds to break into stride to head for the trees when a wave of snow hit me and covered me. the same wave knocked Riley off my sled had who was trying to see where randy was headed. The wave knocked riley off my sled and into a tree where my sled pinned his legs against it, he had no idea what hit him. that same wave carried jeff and his sled 50 yard down the hill. jeff scrambled to pull his avy bag cord 3 times but did not deploy. at that point jeff mad a decision to start scrambling for a tree as he was headed for a cliff. at this point I was barried with only my hand sticking out and I was frantically trying to clear snow away from my face, then a third slide came and burried me 3 feet under and it was like being concreted into the ground, I could not even blink the snow was packed so tight around me. from what I was told jeff was only haging on by a tree from being washed over the cliff after the third slide came. Randy who was on the sled some how miraculisly was able to avoid all 3 slides after being tossed and turned on his sled and managed to ride it out ( act of god, or something, call it what you want). all the avy's settled and riley was buring 5 feet under pinned by the sled and I was compacted like a garbage truck 3 feet under. Randy said he began immediate panic mode and began yelling for anyone left uncovered, as he could not see anyone or know where any one ended up. Jeff yelled out from 150 yards below, " I am here". randy ran all the way down to jeff to check his status, then they turned on there beacons and got a signal 50 yard up and 50 yards down (which would have been over the cliff) they scrambled up and down the slope to determine where the upper signal was coming from and were able to find Riley's signal after roughly 5-10 minutes, took 5 minutes to uncover rileys face and then a few more minutes to shut his beacon off. Riley was in severe pain as his knees and legs were pinned between a tree and my sled (which has landed him in Vernon emergency for surgery as a result). After getting riley air and his beacon shut off randy and jeff began ther search for number 2, me, just so happens they were standing on me the whole time they were digging out riley, but because we were so close the most recent ortovox avy beacons could not differentiate the two. Randy noticed a black spot through the snow (my belaclava) and frantically began digging. He uncovered my face and found a blue and purple corpse (literally), he said I was not breathing nor responsive. he continued to uncover my chest and abdomin, yelling "breath XXXXX, breath XXXXX!) I apparantly blinked very slowly and gasped a tiny breath of air. I do not rember much untill about 30 miniutes after I was pulled out of the hole. They continued to work on riley as he was pinned down. after all was said and done we ended up hiking/quadrupling off the hill with the remaining sled. worst scenario ever!!!!

ps.
being barried alive is the worst thing on the planet, your lungs affixiate and the pain is unbearable, then you begin haluciating and thinking you can just take a nap and it will all be OK! when you get to that stage think of anything you can to keep you consious, kids, wife, girfriend, sled, job, whatever it takes to hang on for an extra 30 seconds, because I assure you it will count. I am sure this blurb does not do the justis to the trials and tribulations my barried partner went through, nor our other two friends (who happened to save our lives) went through.

PSS, avy is out there, ride with caution!!!
__________________
 
wow man...it seems so early for a slide like this to come down
glad everyone is A-ok and thx for sharing your story

let's learn from this people and ride smart out there
 
HOLY CHIT YOU GUYS, GLAD YOU MADE IT OUT! Went to an avy class last and pray I can avoid any/all slides. Very scary.
 
sounds like your buds did it right!!

What was/is the snow pack like up there? What type of layer did it slide on?
 
First off, there were no mistakes made!!! two of us should be dead and are alive because of the heads of the two who were not burried, have a read. the outcome could not have been better.

I am not a man who expresses himself well in person, so I want to thank, from the bottom of my heart the two individuals who kept there wits about them (you know who you are Jeff and Randy, and my family is indebted to you) and were able to over come all ODDS to dig me and Riley out of our snow caskets. We were in frisby at the back in deadmans creek (maybe not the best decision!). Anyway we dropped in at 300pm bc thinking this may not be the best decision, got almost to the bottom and realized there was no safe way out the bottom. person x went a bit further and lost his nuts, decided it was best to dig in and try to come out the top. I removed my pack and helmet and proceeded hike down to help turn his sled around. We turned his sled around and as he regained his breath I began to hike back up. he hit the throttle and begin his minny adventure back up. Randy made it 50 yards and the slope broke, we all thought,"wow get the cameras this is going to be funny", then the slope fractured above him!!! I had literally 2 seconds to break into stride to head for the trees when a wave of snow hit me and covered me. the same wave knocked Riley off my sled had who was trying to see where randy was headed. The wave knocked riley off my sled and into a tree where my sled pinned his legs against it, he had no idea what hit him. that same wave carried jeff and his sled 50 yard down the hill. jeff scrambled to pull his avy bag cord 3 times but did not deploy. at that point jeff mad a decision to start scrambling for a tree as he was headed for a cliff. at this point I was barried with only my hand sticking out and I was frantically trying to clear snow away from my face, then a third slide came and burried me 3 feet under and it was like being concreted into the ground, I could not even blink the snow was packed so tight around me. from what I was told jeff was only haging on by a tree from being washed over the cliff after the third slide came. Randy who was on the sled some how miraculisly was able to avoid all 3 slides after being tossed and turned on his sled and managed to ride it out ( act of god, or something, call it what you want). all the avy's settled and riley was buring 5 feet under pinned by the sled and I was compacted like a garbage truck 3 feet under. Randy said he began immediate panic mode and began yelling for anyone left uncovered, as he could not see anyone or know where any one ended up. Jeff yelled out from 150 yards below, " I am here". randy ran all the way down to jeff to check his status, then they turned on there beacons and got a signal 50 yard up and 50 yards down (which would have been over the cliff) they scrambled up and down the slope to determine where the upper signal was coming from and were able to find Riley's signal after roughly 5-10 minutes, took 5 minutes to uncover rileys face and then a few more minutes to shut his beacon off. Riley was in severe pain as his knees and legs were pinned between a tree and my sled (which has landed him in Vernon emergency for surgery as a result). After getting riley air and his beacon shut off randy and jeff began ther search for number 2, me, just so happens they were standing on me the whole time they were digging out riley, but because we were so close the most recent ortovox avy beacons could not differentiate the two. Randy noticed a black spot through the snow (my belaclava) and frantically began digging. He uncovered my face and found a blue and purple corpse (literally), he said I was not breathing nor responsive. he continued to uncover my chest and abdomin, yelling "breath XXXXX, breath XXXXX!) I apparantly blinked very slowly and gasped a tiny breath of air. I do not rember much untill about 30 miniutes after I was pulled out of the hole. They continued to work on riley as he was pinned down. after all was said and done we ended up hiking/quadrupling off the hill with the remaining sled. worst scenario ever!!!!

ps.
being barried alive is the worst thing on the planet, your lungs affixiate and the pain is unbearable, then you begin haluciating and thinking you can just take a nap and it will all be OK! when you get to that stage think of anything you can to keep you consious, kids, wife, girfriend, sled, job, whatever it takes to hang on for an extra 30 seconds, because I assure you it will count. I am sure this blurb does not do the justis to the trials and tribulations my barried partner went through, nor our other two friends (who happened to save our lives) went through.

PSS, avy is out there, ride with caution!!!
__________________


Glad you guys are safe and thanks for posting. I think we can all learn fom this incident with some discussion.

Some other things to discuss;

Did your group dig a pit?

What was your assesment of the slope? You said you were not sure on dropping into the area. That is a sign to leave it for another day.

Any whumping sounds when you were walking to your buddy?

I am not criticizing, just looking for info
 
Thanks for sharing the experience. I'm sure we'll get more details through time, but I'd really like to know everything about this incident. Especially about the equipment. You said your buddy tried 3 times to pull his avy bag cord with no deployment. Any details there? And about the Ortovox beacons not being able to see the 2 separate burials. Which Ortovox beacons were they? Again I am so glad everyone is alive and well (except for the leg). Please be safe out there everyone.
 
I am familiar with Frisby but not with the names of the areas. Could someone describe where Deadmans Creek is?
 
I am so happy all were safe in the end. I'm confident more will come for the better in this situation. Now go hug your family.
Safe sleddin'
RS
 
Wow, thanks for the story. Glad to hear everyone will be ok ! Take time and recover and don't be afraid to talk to people. It can be a huge mental ordeal just not physical to walk away from something like this ! Oh and make sure you buy your buds a beer or ten !
 
Glad you all made it out. I can't comment on the situation...what was right or wrong, just want to hear & learn all I can from your experience.
Thanks for posting.
 
sounds like a life changing experience.
a true testament for keeping your head and not panicking. :beer;
on a side note ( my curiosity makes me ask ) has anyone tried to deploy the bag since the event? is it still not firing?if it does fire now, wow that will bring up a lot of questions.....mm
 
A very good avalanche story for a change.

Please provide more information on the equipment. I'd like to hear more about what went wrong. I personally wouldn't judge you but it would be good to learn from your mistakes.

This event shows how small snowmobiling is compared to everything else in life (even though I pretty much sleep, eat and live snowmobiling)!
 
crazy to hear of an avy of this nature this early in the season. after having first hand experience in a bad avy rescue last year these stories really hit home a lot harder than they used to. VERY GLAD to here that everyone made it out alright, hope your buddy's surgery/surgery's go well. thanks for sharing your experience
 
Kudos to the rescuers, and their fast efforts. At first it sounded like nothing but red flags... BUT
I could only imagine how difficult is must be to get it together, plan your attack, and manage priorities.... AND have a buddy or 2 in distress.

Job well done.

I am also, like anyone else, curious about which pack, was malfunctioning, since I just bought one myself (but tested with good results)
 
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