Conclusions
What can we learn from it? Constant vigilance is one clear mandate. We can never let our guard down. Every decision has implications. Another take-home point is that consequences are critical. Craig knew the avalanche hazard was moderate, yet he stepped near enough to be caught to a slide path with extreme consequences on this last, tiny portion of the ascent.
It also emphasizes how incredibly vulnerable we are with skins on. We must try to climb terrain that is significantly safer than what we ski. I had a parallel accident while skinning to my home run on March 31, 2006. I stepped on a small windslab at the same altitude on the other (west) side of God’s Lawnmower. The carpet was ripped out from under me, and I had zero control over my destiny. Gravity tumbled me over a small cliff and then I slammed into a tree. But luckily, I hit the tree with the back of my legs. Waves of snow tried to rip me off the small fir, and I was bruised from calf to butt, but I hung on and lived to ski another day.
The similarities are eerie, and illustrate another reality of backcountry skiing: nature is random, and shit happens! If you choose to ski in high-consequence terrain, such as the upper flanks of Kessler, you must make wise choices and have good fortune. Sadly, on April 11th, 2013, 34-yo Craig Patterson was not lucky, and those who had the good fortune to know him must carry on without a person of great energy, integrity, compassion, charm, charisma and competence. Let us learn from his passing and tread carefully near the top of Kessler’s NE spur, aka “Patterson Ridge,” and every other slide path we must cross.
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