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Thread: Eastern Sierra turns deadly

  1. #1
    Join Date
    Mar 2005
    Location
    Bishop, Ca.
    Posts
    4

    Eastern Sierra turns deadly

    Saturday, March 26th two people were killed in an avalanche on Mt. Tom in the Eastern Sierra. The slide occurred in Elderberry Canyon, a popular backcountry destination just outside of Bishop.

    Here are a few more details of the accident. Information is being posted on www.sierrabackcountry.org as it becomes available. Below is the most current info we have heard on the accident.

    Updated 3/27/05
    We just received a report of the Eastern Sierra's first avalanche fatality in several years.

    After talking briefly with the members of the party who were involved, this is what we know:

    A party of 7 skinned up Elderberry Canyon on Mt. Tom on Saturday the 26th. The group was comprised of locals and visitors. The overall experience of the group was high, with knowledge of the terrain and snowpack. The group travelled to roughly 12,000' before they started skiing. The first two skiers had safely descended the bowl. Skiers 3 and 4 were on the slope that slid at the same time, though not skiing at the same time when the slope released with roughly a 2-3' crown. The slide caught both skiers and carried them 1,200 - 1,500', burying one of them about 3.5m deep. The remaining 3 skiers at the top of the slope started down and kicked off another slide in doing so that caught all 3 of them. 2 were able to escape the slide, the 3rd rode the slide roughly 1,000' to the deposition zone, though was not hurt and able to get himself out. It took the rest of the party roughly 1hr. to locate the victims via beacon and probe search. Both were dead at the time they were located.



    We have another significant storm on tap for tonight into tomorrow morning. Please be very careful if you are heading out into the bc of the Eastern Sierra anytime soon. We don't want to hear about any more accidents.

    Condolences to friends and family of those affected.

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Jul 2004
    Location
    not far from snowbird
    Posts
    2,244

    Unhappy

    Quote Originally Posted by Forrest
    It took the rest of the party roughly 1hr. to locate the victims via beacon and probe search. Both were dead at the time they were located.





    Condolences to friends and family of those affected.

    truely sad. that must have been an hour of pure hell for searchers and a few seconds or minutes of hell for the victims.

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Mar 2005
    Location
    Bishop, Ca.
    Posts
    4
    Here is a little more info on the accident

    Here is the press release that is going out to local newspapers and radio. It includes a little more info than in the first post I put up. The press release in from the Eastern Sierra Avalanche Center. I apologize for the formatting, taken from a .pdf file. The actual document can be found HERE.

    PRESS RELEASE
    Mt. Tom avalanche kills 2 skiers and injures one other
    On Saturday, March 26th, 2005 the Eastern Sierra saw its first two avalanche fatalities in
    almost 10 years. This is a tragic accident that is deeply affecting members of the local
    community. While it is extremely important that we get information out to the public quickly
    and effectively, it needs to be done with care to assure that all the details are accurately
    reported. We appreciate your help in this matter.

    Background
    Mt. Tom (13,652’) sits as one of the landmark peaks of the Eastern Sierra, just west of
    Bishop, Ca. One of its most popular ski descents is Elderberry Canyon, a long glacially carved
    canyon that swoops from the North Ridge of Mt. Tom near 12,000 ft. to the mouth of the
    canyon at 5,400 ft. near the Pine Creek road outside Rovana.
    From March 19th to March 25th, the eastern Sierra received 5-8 inches of water with snowfall
    amounts of 66 inches recorded at Mammoth Mountain Ski Area (Please see
    http://patrol.mammothmountain.com). Wind loading associated with these storms created
    extremely unstable snowpack conditions with many skier triggered slides reported from both
    the backcountry and the ski area.

    Accident Report
    A group of 7 skiers, comprised of Eastside locals and visitors, climbed Elderberry Canyon on
    Mt. Tom on Saturday, March 26th. The group planned on skinning the canyon to the
    North Ridge, where they would ski back down the way they came up. By 1:30pm they had
    reached the ridgeline (right around 12,000’) at the top of the canyon and were beginning their
    descent. The first two skiers safely skied a broad east facing bowl-like portion of the canyon,
    just below the ridge. The remaining portion of the party waited in a safe zone above as the
    3rd and 4th skiers entered the slope. Just after doing so, the entire slope released on them in a
    soft-slab avalanche. Crown sizes varied from approximately 2 to 4 ft. In addition, one of the
    flanks ran from the top of the bowl down the south ridge approximately 700 to 1,000 ft. Both
    skiers were caught and carried down the slope with the large amount of debris about 1,500’
    before being buried on a large bench-like moraine.
    After seeing the slide, the remaining 3 skiers above quickly hurried down to begin the rescue.
    Upon doing so, they caused a second avalanche, slightly higher and to the north of the first
    slide. This slide caught all 3 skiers. One was able to escape, one rode the slide, staying on
    top for roughly 1,000’ and a third escaped after a short distance after breaking her fibula.
    Once the 4 uninjured skiers reached the deposition zone, a beacon search began. The first
    victim was recovered within 20 minutes. The second victim was buried under 3.5 meters of
    debris and took about an hour to reach. CPR was attempted. One victim is a middle-aged
    male from Bishop, Ca, the other a middle-aged female visiting from Montana. Names are not
    being released at this time.
    No crown profile or formal avalanche observations were made at the time of recovery. A
    large number of natural releases had occurred on all aspects over a wide range of elevations
    in Elderberry Canyon. It is also important to note the amount of snowfall over the past few
    days, as well as the strong ridge-top winds which had transported a large amount of snow
    into the canyon.
    As more information becomes available, we will release it. For more information on this
    accident, please contact Nate Greenberg.

    Director
    Nate Greenberg

    President
    Walter Rosenthal

    Secretary
    Howie Schwartz

    Treasurer
    Robert ‘SP’ Parker

    Forecaster
    Sue Burak

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