Saskatoon StarPhoenix

Ice climbers urged to wear avalanche safety gear

Equipment helps rescuers, experts say

- COLETTE DERWORIZ

BANFF, ALTA. • Outdoor experts are hoping that an avalanche that killed three world-class climbers last spring will lead to improved safety in the sport.

American Jess Roskelley and Austrians David Lama and Hansjorg Auer disappeare­d in April as they tried to descend Howse Peak in the Rocky Mountains. Rescuers have said the search was challengin­g because the three weren’t wearing avalanche beacons.

The avalanche, which made internatio­nal news, turned a spotlight on climbers and why many don’t carry safety gear.

Grant Statham, a mountain risk specialist for Parks Canada, said climbers want to be light, but anyone who’s in avalanche terrain should have a beacon, a probe and a shovel.

“You sometimes hear climbers say, ‘There’s no point in me wearing this equipment because, if I get hit by an avalanche, I’ll be killed,’ which in some cases is true,” he said in an interview.

“Except that there is a point in wearing the equipment because somebody is going to have to come in there and find you.”

Parks Canada has been working for years to improve safety for ice climbers with informatio­n bulletins and early-season avalanche warnings, he said.

A study in the Canadian Medical Associatio­n Journal in 2009 found that 58 per cent of climbers were asphyxiate­d and 42 per cent died from trauma in a 21-year period.

“You are buried and you can’t breathe, (but) there’s always a chance that you can dig people out in certain situations,” Statham said.

He and colleague Stephen Holeczi wrote a paper in 2016 looking at the death of a climber earlier that year at Polar Circus, a 700-metre climb on a frozen waterfall. They found that 15 rescuers spent nearly 80 hours doing avalanche control, searching and digging to find the man.

“If a person was wearing a transceive­r and we had to dig them out, we could do it in 14 hours,” he said. “If they had both been wearing transceive­rs, his partner could have dug him out and left him on the surface.”

Statham said the man’s body was found — 200 metres below the surface — using a faint signal from a Recco strip, a type of rescue technology on his head lamp.

After the Howse Peak avalanche, rescuers threw transceive­rs out of a helicopter to mark the spot before bad weather came in and caused more snowslides.

“The pilot actually held the hover, while we stayed clipped to a line and searched,” he recalled. “It was pretty edgy in there doing that work.”

The three men were finally found by a search dog.

Will Gadd, an ice climber and paraglider based in Canmore, Alta., also appeared on the panel. He said he’s lost friends in the mountains, including some who weren’t found for years.

“They were gone … and it would have been nice to say goodbye to them.”

Paraglider­s have come to wear personal locator beacons, he said.

“If you show up … and you don’t have a (GPS tracking device), you are an idiot,” he said. “Why can’t we solve it in climbing?”

Gadd said it’s unacceptab­le some of his friends couldn’t be found and others on the rescue team had to put themselves in danger to locate them.

“We need to solve this,” said Gadd, who noted he’s trying to get gear manufactur­ers to add Recco strips to harnesses and other climbing equipment.

 ?? HO / THE NORTH FACE / CP FILES ?? Rescuers say the search for American Jess Roskelley and Austrians David Lama and Hansjorg Auer, who were killed by an avalanche as they tried to descend Howse Peak in the Rocky Mountains, was more challengin­g because they weren’t wearing beacons.
HO / THE NORTH FACE / CP FILES Rescuers say the search for American Jess Roskelley and Austrians David Lama and Hansjorg Auer, who were killed by an avalanche as they tried to descend Howse Peak in the Rocky Mountains, was more challengin­g because they weren’t wearing beacons.

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