CBC Edition

Woman survives being buried by avalanche for almost 20 minutes

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Rescuers say a woman is lucky to be alive after she was caught in an avalanche in the North Shore moun‐ tains near Vancouver and completely buried upside down for nearly 20 min‐ utes.

The avalanche happened Sunday afternoon on the south face of Pump Peak on Mount Seymour, less than 20 kilometres northeast of downtown Vancouver.

According to the North Shore Rescue (NSR) Facebook page, the woman was snow‐ shoeing with a companion in the backcountr­y when the avalanche struck and buried them both.

Jim Loree with NSR says the couple, who are in their 30s, were able to get up the trail, but ran into trouble on the way back down.

"[When they] got onto the slope, [one of the snow‐ shoers] basically said he heard a crack, like a gunshot almost, and then all the snow started leaving," Loree told CBC News.

NSR said the man was able to dig himself out and call 911 before locating his companion's snowshoe pok‐ ing out of the avalanche de‐ bris.

They said he was able to uncover the woman, who was responsive, but hy‐ pothermic and discoloure­d from a lack of oxygen.

Rescue field teams were able to reach the scene to provide emergency care. While the man was able to hike down himself, the woman had minor injuries and required support to get down the mountain.

Loree says warmth and fluids helped the woman re‐ cover by the time crews reached the Mount Seymour Lodge parking lot. He says the woman opted to leave with her husband, rather than go with first responders to the hospital.

The couple declined an in‐ terview request with CBC News.

WATCH | Avalanche safety tips for people ven‐ turing into B.C.'s backcoun‐ try:

The search and rescue or‐ ganization says the area where the avalanche took place had been rated as highdanger terrain by Avalanche Canada, with travel not rec‐ ommended and human-trig‐ gered avalanches very likely.

Rescuers say the pair were not carrying rescue gear, such as beacons, probes and shovels, and did not have avalanche training.

"We cannot state strongly enough how lucky they were that the first individual was able to spot the second and dig her out," NSR said on Facebook. "Had this not hap‐ pened, we would be looking at a very different result."

"In conditions like we had this weekend, it is best to give anything with a slope a rest and let the snowpack settle."

Simon Horton, an Avalanche Canada fore‐ caster, said dangerous avalanche conditions exist across the province due to large amounts of recent snowfall.

In recent days the South Coast mountains have been consistent­ly at Level 4 on its five-level danger scale, he said.

"Most areas had over a metre of snow on the weekend, causing dangerous conditions, and we're expect‐ ing another big snowfall on Monday night," Horton said.

He said the snowshoers likely triggered the avalanche on Sunday, given the risky conditions.

"Avalanche conditions change day to day, hour by hour … so the key to travel‐ ling safely in the backcountr­y is having basic avalanche training and then monitoring the conditions."

Horton says newer snow loads typically strengthen by bonding with older snow‐ packs within a few days, but that "it's a little more compli‐ cated this time of year."

He says warm weather coming up over the weekend will take the snowpack longer to bond, meaning potentiall­y longer periods of avalanche risk in the weeks ahead.

WATCH | Couple was snowshoein­g on Vancou‐ ver's North Shore when slope gave away:

Elsewhere, a 19-year-old man from Kelowna, B.C., died after being buried in an avalanche near Canmore, Al‐ ta.

Canmore RCMP said in a statement that two men were skiing in the backcoun‐ try east of Mount Engadine Lodge when the avalanche struck Sunday afternoon.

One man was able to dig himself out, but the second remained buried. RCMP said the missing man's body was recovered Monday morning with assistance from Kananaskis Mountain Res‐ cue.

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