The Denver Post

DESPITE DANGER, BACKCOUNTR­Y STILL LURES COLORADANS

Despite a near-record avalanche death toll in Colorado, recent snows have brought skiers, snowboarde­rs and snowmobile­rs in search of powder

- By John Meyer The Denver Post

Despite a historical­ly unstable snowpack that has Colorado on the verge of breaking its record for avalanche fatalities, the lure of powder remains powerful for backcountr­y skiers, snowboarde­rs and snowmobile­rs.

There have been 11 avalanche fatalities this winter, one short of the record set in 1993. February has been especially deadly with seven deaths, three just this week. But because of a series of storms that began Feb. 3, following poor early season snow, backcountr­y enthusiast­s are making up for lost time.

On Thursday, the temperatur­e at Berthoud Pass was 9 degrees at

noon as Jim Smith finished off three hours of backcountr­y skiing, doing laps in an area called Pumphouse that required strenuous climbing along with giddy descents. His hydration system had frozen and ice clung to his whiskers, but the 74-year-old was loving life.

“The thing about backcountr­y skiing that’s very attractive is that

it’s so beautiful,” the Denver resident said. “I only come up when there’s 4 to 6 inches of powder because for me, that’s what it’s all about, the powder. There’s nothing like it. It’s so exhilarati­ng. It’s like floating on a cloud.”

The backcountr­y avalanche danger on Thursday was rated “considerab­le” by the Colorado Avalanche Informatio­n Center, meaning level three on a scale of one to five. Smith said he almost never skis anything steeper than 25 degrees, knowing that most avalanches occur on slopes of 30-45 degrees. He was skiing alone, although plenty of other people were skiing the pass.

“I don’t take any chances,” Smith said. “I’m really careful. Skiing alone is not a good idea, butwhenyou­wanttogo,you gotta go.”

There were 22 cars at the Jones Pass trailhead a few miles west of Berthoud Thursday morning. Dan McGrew, a Denver firefighte­r with lots of backcountr­y experience and education, was planning to avoid slopes steeper than 30 degrees as he set out.

“Everyone who goes out here thinks it’s not going to happen to them,” McGrew said. “You have to have some form of humility in your decision-making, and realize how error-prone human beings are when they’re out here.”

Last Sunday morning, a 57year-old snowboarde­r set out by himself to climb Mount Trelease, located in the backcountr­y just north of Interstate 70 and adjacent to the Loveland ski area, to ride in an area known as Pat’s Knob. The daily forecast from the avalanche center that morning rated the danger as “considerab­le.”

In addition, the CAIC had issued a “special avalanche advisory” two days earlier that was still in effect, saying in part, “Avalanche conditions are unusual. Backcountr­y travelers can trigger avalanches that may break very wide and run the full length of the avalanche path. Your normal routes and safety habits may not keep you out of a dangerous avalanche.”

The snowboarde­r, later identified by the Clear Creek County coroner’s office as David Heide of St. Mary’s (a small community near Idaho Springs), was caught in an avalanche some time around 8:45 a.m. According to an accident report issued Tuesday by the CAIC, the fracture line was as much as 20 feet high and was 850 feet wide, longer than two football fields. The slide ran 500 vertical feet, leaving a debris field 6 to 10 feet deep.

Shortly after the slide, another snowboarde­r heading up the

trail caught a glimpse of Sam’s Knob from a distance and noticed an avalanche had occurred. That rider, not identified in the CAIC report, and other backcountr­y travelers communicat­ed with authoritie­s and helped them locate the victim’s body.

The Alpine Rescue Team, a volunteer search-and-rescue team that operates in Clear Creek, Gilpin and Jefferson counties, responded with more than 20 members, along with Clear Creek County sheriff’s deputies, a half-dozen Loveland ski patrollers and CAIC staff members. They had been concerned that more avalanches could happen in the search area.

“It’s petrifying every time we step out to think, ‘All right, what could happen? Could we be the next one caught in a slide?’ ” said Clear Creek County undersheri­ff Bruce Snelling. In certain areas, “We have told people, ‘Snow conditions are such that we’re not going to go in there for a couple of months to recover

somebody.’ Some places are just too risky.”

Heide had been carrying his cellphone, but not an avalanche transceive­r.

“Unfortunat­ely he had made contact with several trees on the way down, so even though his avalanche airbag was deployed, when you get run down through the trees like that, it’s pretty tough” to survive, said Tom Wood, who ran the recovery operation for the Alpine Rescue Team.

Snelling understand­s the attraction of the backcountr­y but urges people not to go alone, to check the daily CAIC report, to educate themselves and take and use all appropriat­e equipment.

“I get it,” Snelling said. “It’s a draw, being in the backcountr­y. It’s tranquil, it’s peaceful, it’s beautiful. But you’ve got to take precaution­s.”

Wood worries that the things avalanche experts say can fall on deaf ears, even in an unusually active year for avalanches.

“It’s just a fine line between educating the public why this isn’t necessaril­y the best time or the best idea right now, versus preaching to people, talking down to people, and then they just tune you out,” Wood said. “We can say ‘don’t go out solo’ until we’re blue in the face, and people will still think that applies to everyone but them.”

Also on Sunday, a snowmobile­r was killed near Rollins Pass. Another was killed Tuesday near Rand.

When the pandemic closed Colorado ski areas last year and people bought backcountr­y snow gear in huge numbers, search-and-rescue teams across the state expressed concerns that inexperien­ced, ill-equipped people would go out and get themselves into trouble. But Colorado avalanche experts have noticed that this year’s avalanche fatalities tend to have been people with lots of backcountr­y experience who were wellequipp­ed with safety gear.

“It’s not the novices and the newbies who are getting into trouble,” said Dale Atkins, a member of the Alpine Rescue Team since 1974 who also spent 19 years as a CAIC forecaster.

“It’s people who have some knowledge, and they have the enthusiasm and fitness to get out and enjoy the mountains. This year is one of those years when what your experience has told you, or what you think is safe, or what has been safe for you in past years, may not be safe this year.”

Atkins is an avid backcountr­y skier, but says he typically skis slopes less than 30 degrees, no steeper than intermedia­te runs atskiareas.

“I love the steep and deep, but

I’m also jaded from many years of mountain rescue and avalanche accident investigat­ions,” Atkins said. “I’ve realized I don’t need to ski the steep. I like the deep, but I don’t need to be on the steep. If you stay to shallow slopes, and you stay out from underneath the steep slopes, you can be out there all day, having fun and not having to worry about avalanches.

“But if we were having this conversati­on 20 years ago, I probably wouldn’t sound so sage.”

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Left: Kyle Goldstein and his dog, Moose, head out for a day of backcountr­y skiing at the top of Berthoud Pass on Thursday near Winter Park. He carries avalanche safety gear with him — a shovel, beacon and probes. Goldstein said he was staying on slopes of less than 30 degrees to keep it safe for him and Moose. Right: Jim Smith, 74, smiles after a day of backcountr­y skiing at the top of Berthoud Pass on Thursday near Winter Park.
Left: Kyle Goldstein and his dog, Moose, head out for a day of backcountr­y skiing at the top of Berthoud Pass on Thursday near Winter Park. He carries avalanche safety gear with him — a shovel, beacon and probes. Goldstein said he was staying on slopes of less than 30 degrees to keep it safe for him and Moose. Right: Jim Smith, 74, smiles after a day of backcountr­y skiing at the top of Berthoud Pass on Thursday near Winter Park.
 ?? Photos by Helen H. Richardson, The Denver Post ?? From left to right, Doug Mock and his wife, Emilie, and their friends Hanna Gleason and husband Gordon Allen head out for a day of skiing in the backcountr­y on Jones Pass on Thursday near Empire. The group is well-equipped with avalanche gear — shovels, beacons and probes. Before setting out the group checks to make sure their beacons are working just in case any of them are caught in an avalanche.
Photos by Helen H. Richardson, The Denver Post From left to right, Doug Mock and his wife, Emilie, and their friends Hanna Gleason and husband Gordon Allen head out for a day of skiing in the backcountr­y on Jones Pass on Thursday near Empire. The group is well-equipped with avalanche gear — shovels, beacons and probes. Before setting out the group checks to make sure their beacons are working just in case any of them are caught in an avalanche.
 ?? Photos by Helen H. Richardson, The Denver Post ?? Rob Gillis, in back, and his wife, Sarah, skin up with other skiers for a day of skiing in the backcountr­y at the top of Berthoud Pass on Thursday near Winter Park. The two take precaution­s when they set out for a day of fun in the backcountr­y. They carry avalanche shovels, beacons and probes and check to ensure the beacons are working before they take off across the snow. The gear could save their lives if they are caught in an avalanche.
Photos by Helen H. Richardson, The Denver Post Rob Gillis, in back, and his wife, Sarah, skin up with other skiers for a day of skiing in the backcountr­y at the top of Berthoud Pass on Thursday near Winter Park. The two take precaution­s when they set out for a day of fun in the backcountr­y. They carry avalanche shovels, beacons and probes and check to ensure the beacons are working before they take off across the snow. The gear could save their lives if they are caught in an avalanche.
 ??  ?? Old avalanche paths can be seen on the mountainsi­de off Colorado 40 on Berthoud Pass on Thursday near Empire.
Old avalanche paths can be seen on the mountainsi­de off Colorado 40 on Berthoud Pass on Thursday near Empire.

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