The Guardian (Charlottetown)

‘Bigger than thou’

Awestruck snowmobile­rs won’t stop after five avalanche deaths

- THE CANADIAN PRESS HEALTH

The day after a colossal avalanche killed five snowmobile­rs in eastern British Columbia, Thea Pelletier climbed aboard her machine and returned to the backcountr­y wilderness.

She unfastened a yellow plastic lily from her backpack and planted the flower in pristine snow to pay her respects.

“I had a moment. It was intense. It was bigger than thou,’’ Pelletier said. “You feel the insignific­ance of what you are when you’re up against mountains like this. I can’t imagine someone calling my mom to say, ‘ Your daughter is not coming home.’’’

The B.C. Coroners Service revealed over the weekend the identities of the five Alberta men who died during a recreation­al outing on Mount Renshaw, near the small community of McBride, B.C.

They were identified as Vincent Loewen, 52, of Vegreville; Tony Greenwood, 41, of Grand Prairie County; Ricky Robinson, 55, of Spruce Grove; Todd Chisholm, 47, of St. Albert; and John Garley, 49, of Stony Plain.

RCMP said they were in four separate groups that had converged just before the slide came roaring down.

As the sun set Saturday evening, four trucks with Alberta licence plates and snowmobile trailers attached were left empty in the darkness at the foot of the Rocky Mountain range.

Inside one was a pack of cigarettes and ring of faux Hawaiian flowers, hanging from the rearview mirror. There were Tim Hortons coffee cups in another, and an Edmonton Oilers cap sat on the dash of the vehicle next to it.

By early Sunday, groups of snowmobile­rs prepared to leave McBride — some calling it a stressful weekend, while others believed more painful emotions would set in later.

Two men said they were heading back to the scene to retrieve the sled of their friend, who had died. “He was a very nice guy, a family man,’’ said Leo, who didn’t give his last name, of his friend John Garley.

He said preventing future deaths required “education,’’ but he described the scene on Friday as “just a bad situation.’’

Neil Petryshen, from Saskatoon, said he and his friends hadn’t absorbed the loss yet, but suggested the tragedy wouldn’t stop them from going out again.

“Why doesn’t it stop us? There’s different types of brain mentality for sledders,’’ he said, noting they weren’t into going up extreme peaks.

“But the risk-takers, they want to go there. As you advance, you want to push the limits.’’

Pelletier, 31, and her husband were among exhilarate­d teams of sledders who returned to the parking lot near the mountain’s base after ripping around in the mountains.

She said she’d first heard of the deaths when a news alert flashed on her smartphone.

Her first reaction was “total shock,’’ she said. When she and her husband returned to McBride, they went to dinner at a restaurant that was packed with a sombre crowd.

“It was pretty heavy in there,’’ she said, after listening to rescuers describe pulling bodies and 12 survivors from the snow. “They were just debriefing over a beer.’’

But the couple still chose to head out the next morning on the mountain where the tragedy occurred.

Pelletier admitted feeling trepidatio­n, but was confident they took proper precaution­s. She checked the avalanche danger rating, hung an SOS beacon from her neck, and carried a probe and shovel.

“I guess I’m a risk-taker. But you have to take calculated risks,’’ she said.

Though she and her husband steered well clear of the avalanche site, from one vista they could still see vast cracks where snow bowls had been disturbed.

“You’ve got to go through a lot of sketchy areas to where those guys ended up,’’ she said.

 ?? CP PHOTO ?? Clint Pelletier, of Edmonton, Alta., is silhouette­d while loading his snowmobile onto a trailer after snowmobili­ng with his wife at Mount Renshaw near McBride, B.C., on Saturday.
CP PHOTO Clint Pelletier, of Edmonton, Alta., is silhouette­d while loading his snowmobile onto a trailer after snowmobili­ng with his wife at Mount Renshaw near McBride, B.C., on Saturday.

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