Question- how do people prefer to travel in, say, a group of 2 on steeper, avy terrain? Example: an open headwall, say an average of 38-40 degrees or so that you're either skinning up/French stepping up and then switching to front pointing/booting/post-holing. (This just came up for me this past weekend.)
Other safety considerations aside, conventional wisdom clearly dictates that you don't pass above any of your partners and that you space yourself out. Given that most terrain of this style requires switchbacks to travel up, you have a few hazards to mitigate- first, crossing above/below your partner (which really is just a way to avoid simultaneous burial/being in the same place when a slide occuers), and second, overweighting a particular area of the snow by clustering up between crosses. So as I see it, you have a few options, as I list below.
1) Everyone climbs an entirely different region of the headwall. Good because everyone is spread out, bad because you're 2x more likely to find a weakness, and a big slide across the whole aspect would take you all out anyway, and everyone is always breaking trail, and you're tracking up the entire slope. (This seems silly to me and I am only including it for discussion).
2) Go from point to point of the switchbacks, one at a time, meeting at each corner before heading out again. Good here as no one is crossing above/below anyone, but bad because you cluster (albeit briefly) in the end of each switchback and have 2x the weight on the snow, and also you're both in the same place for a few moments before the next person leaves.
3) Travel "out of phase:" defy conventional wisdom and be at opposite ends of the switchback, but cross above/below in the middle. Good because you move past each other quickly and the snow isn't weighted in any one place, but bad because there's burial potential when you're transiently both in line.
4) Climb the entire slope using one skintrack/bootback/path, but one at a time, with one person waiting at the bottom until the other climbs in full. This is undoubtedly the safest/most conservative way, but it's pretty impractical and obviously takes 2x as long, which introduces issues of cold and reduced speed and other associated issues. Also if your group is 3-4, then it's basically impossible.
So- a classic tradeoff. Personally, #'s 2 and 3 make the most sense to me, and I tend to do #2, but am thinking more about #3 as being an option as well in spite of the fact that it defies conventional wisdom.
What do others do in this situation? What's the safest approach? Does my question make sense?
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