Penticton Herald

Snowmobile­r killed in avalanche near Valemount

- By The Canadian Press

VALEMOUNT — One person has died in an avalanche that caught two snowmobile­rs over the weekend south of Valemount, not far from the Alberta boundary.

Avalanche Canada says the snowmobile­rs were riding at the base of a slope in a feature known as Bowl 3 in the Oasis area when the avalanche happened on Saturday.

“One person managed to ride away from the avalanche, while the other was fully buried. The survivor was able to locate the buried victim but they were found to be unresponsi­ve,” the avalanche forecaster said in a statement.

RCMP Cpl. Alex Berube says the investigat­ion is being taken over by the BC Coroners Service.

Avalanche Canada forecaster Tyson Rettie said the avalanche was “remote-triggered,” meaning even though the snowmobile­rs were on a less steep slope, their presence was enough to trigger the avalanche above them.

He said the snow gave way because of a weak “sugary” layer of snow crystals near the bottom of the snowpack that was buried in late November.

That layer is fairly widespread throughout the province this season and has been responsibl­e for a number of very significan­t avalanches, he said.

The same scenario is what led to a Jan. 9 avalanche that killed two Nelson Police Service officers near Kaslo, B.C., while they were skiing off duty, Rettie said.

Const. Wade Tittemore, 43, died that day and Const. Mathieu Nolet died of severe internal injuries in hospital on Saturday.

Nolet was 28 years old and had been with the Nelson force for a year.

“Many profession­als have been comparing this year’s snowpack to that of 2003, and 2003 was a particular­ly dangerous year for avalanche accidents in Western Canada,” Rettie said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada