The Daily Courier

Parks Canada sets new rules for climbing highest peak

- By COLETTE DERWORIZ

Parks Canada has brought in new rules for climbers on the country’s highest peak after having to rescue eight people in seven years.

The rules, which are posted on the agency’s website, include a ban on solo climbing on 5,959-metre Mount Logan and a moratorium on winter mountainee­ring expedition­s in Kluane National Park in Yukon.

Climbers are also required to have insurance to cover searchand-rescue costs for any trip in the park’s Icefield Ranges before they are issued a permit.

“It’s an incredibly beautiful place and we still want people to come visit and experience all national parks, including Kluane, and we also want to make sure, when they do, that it’s safe,” said Ed Jager, director of visitor experience with Parks Canada.

He said that includes safety for both visitors and the teams who have to rescue people when something goes wrong.

Jager said the moratorium on winter travel runs from Nov. 15 to March 15. Solo climbing won’t be allowed until further notice.

“Both of those combined together are because of increased rescues that we’ve been seeing,” he said. “Those two factors — time of year and being alone — make expedition­s more complicate­d, more difficult and increase the chance that a rescue might be required.”

Climbers who want to do an expedition in the Icefield Ranges from late March to mid-November require a permit from Parks Canada.

“We are adding a condition to the permit that you must have searchand-rescue insurance,” said Jager. “If you do require a rescue, we will be asking you to pay through your insurance.”

He said the eight rescue missions in the last seven years have cost between $60,000 and $100,000 each. “It’s a complex operation.” The insurance requiremen­t reduces the burden on taxpayers who usually end up picking up the cost of rescues.

Jager said there’s no plan to expand the rules to other national parks.

“The circumstan­ces of Kluane are unique,” he explained. “There’s the isolation. The place where people are getting rescued from is 100 kilometres from the nearest road.

“There’s the altitude. There’s no other place in Canada where you have all these peaks over 5,000 metres where helicopter­s don’t work well and you need to significan­tly change your approach to rescue. There’s very, very few people in that part of the world.”

He said about 120 people do expedition­s in the area annually and about 35 of them climb Mount Logan.

Pat Morrow, a well-known climber who has climbed Mount Logan twice since the 1990s, said the rules sound appropriat­e.

“It’s totally reasonable that they are re-examining the rules of climbing up there,” he said.

Morrow said he has skied and climbed extensivel­y in the Rockies and has done four expedition­s in the Saint Elias mountains in Yukon.

“The scale and seriousnes­s of travel through the Saint Elias is significan­tly greater, not to mention the severity of the weather,” he said. “It’s right on the north side of the Gulf of Alaska and it just gets blasted by big wind and snowstorms, even in the summertime.”

The risks, particular­ly for solo climbers, include icefield crevasses and avalanches.

The distance to start an expedition adds another element of risk, Morrow said.

“It makes eminent sense that there should be adjustment­s to the high costs — actual monetary costs and the potential costs of losing rescuers’ lives or even injuries.”

 ?? The Canadian Press ?? Lisel Currie and Carl Nagy ski roped together on King Trench route of Mount Logan, at Kluane National Park, Yukon.
The Canadian Press Lisel Currie and Carl Nagy ski roped together on King Trench route of Mount Logan, at Kluane National Park, Yukon.

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