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bcoasis

SnowJapan Member
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Posts posted by bcoasis

  1.  Quote:
    This is a very short time if you factor in the confusion, organisation, search, and digging
    Indeed it is a very short time. It's also a very humbling experience groveling around on av debris - an entirely different ballgame than practicing on normal snow.
    One point which I consider to be very important and something which by my observations on the mountain seems to be taken for granted,is group leadership. Even among well travelled 'buddies' it's necessary to discuss what the plan is and who is taking the lead. This saves a lot of time if the 'shit hits the fan'. Someone has to take the leadership responsibility and it's to late to figure it out once a situation exists.
    On a different note it's snowing again in Naeba and having just spent the last 3 days on the bulldozer clearing my place up - I am not happy. It's not all single malt and powder days living in the ski area, it's times like this I wish I was a 'weekend warrior'.
  2. No, I don't use one - not because I don't think they are worthwhile though. I am very much in the school of thought that prevention is better than the cure and although we all make mistakes anything I do which is 'dodgey', I only do it with people I absolutely trust who are on the same 'program' and it's a very 'tight ship'.

    I think it's very important to focus on the basic safety equipment and learn the function as a second nature as oppossed to 'more is better' with marginal comprehension.

  3. That's an old model one dizzy; the new one is stripped down and basically just a strap around unit something like 'vest gun holster'. As for how effective they are - very, if you get it right. By 'right' that means keeping your mouth clear and the mouth piece of the avalung clear of snow and just as the snow is starting to slow and settle, get the avalung into your mouth as you take one last deep breath.

  4. This is just a quick note to those heading this way in the next day or so, regards snow accumulation. There has been a huge amount of snow fall within the last 72 hours and looks likely to continue for a further 24-48 hours. There has been no sun and very little settling in this time. So I am suggesting caution even out of course under the ropes and keeping close attention to your riding buddies. Extra attention to each other as terrain features which normally would not be an issue may very well cause problems with this amount of snow.

  5. I look funny when I ski anyway dizzy, regardless of accessories! Actually, there is said device - it's called an Avalung. Started out being a pack and has now developed into a stripped down version of the essential components only so as to be easily worn within your jacket. Give about 15 mins of air but requires a WELL PRACTICED TECHNIQUE to use it effectively. They are not so expensive and I have seen a few 'gear freaks' with them in Japan. I say gear freaks because I know for a fact that the people that had them are incapable of effecting a beacon search so I can safely assume they wouldn't have had a clue how to use the Avalung in a 'real life' situation.

  6. For all intents and purposes you have 15 minutes at the 35 minute mark there is a 27% chance of a victim being alive. So much for stats, as far as I am concerned it's 15 minutes max and the real target time is 10 minutes or obviously less. The victim will almost certainly be unconcious after 6 minutes unless they did everything right such as the method dizzy mentioned and were lucky. A lot depends on if they hit anything on the way down such as trees or rocks. Most importantly whether or not they took a 'gob' full of snow as they come to rest; in which case 3-4 minutes is about all they have.

    A patroller friend of mine in NZ got buried, the other patrollers got him out in 6 or 7 minutes -I can't remember the exact time; he had to be resuccitated.

  7. If in fact the guide went for help - that would basically amount to criminal negligence. Obviously I wasn't there but regardless of how close help is by leaving the scene to go for help not only ignores one of the most critical rules of an avalanche rescue but almost certainly sentences the victim to death. The only reason I can see for that action is if they were not carrying any equipment in which case the negligence stands.

    Seems to be a bit going on at the moment, lots of snow accumulating very quickly.

  8. I think it's 'Ski Movie', the first one, Toque. I lent my copy to someone a few years ago and have never had it returned so I can't remember exactly. I'm pretty sure the bamboo with the ribbon is a tracer. The chopper pilots can feel where the wind is coming from by the way the chopper is flying and so far as marking a route, that's already well scoped by flyovers. However, I am not Dean Cummings and I wasn't there so all is open to interpretation.

  9. Kagura decision making has generally defied logic; I have sat on that quad when it has been so windy I thought the thing was going to do a loop and yet other times it has been closed when there has been just enough wind to ‘part your hair’. However, the whisper is the management are tearing their hair out over out of bounds riding and the number of ‘idiots’ getting lost or left behind at the end of the day, this season. Short of them finding some solutions to this problem, which I suggest is highly unlikely given their management culture – I suspect on days of heavy snow and bad visibility the quad lift will be non-operandus. Sorry but I don’t consider stopping the lift as an intelligent response to a problem that exists largely because they have kept their head in the sand until it has reached the point where they have lost control.

    My suggestion to anyone heading to Kagura on a snowy and or windy day is give the office a call and ask them not only is the quad going but is there a possibility it will stop; get the name of the person you talk to. If it’s any different from what you were told by telephone then you can take issue (or not) however you feel appropriate.

    On a brighter note, the top lift at Naeba has been running most of the time, which I find as hard to believe as the lifties now smiling at customers and saying ‘thank you’. Someone must have changed the water supply.

  10. Actually, I am from Christchurch, Snowglider. I don't recall the incident you mentioned but it would certainly not surprise me. The kids that swallow the most marbles should not grow up to have children of their own in my opinion but clearly these laws of natural selection don't seem to be working properly. I was utterly convinced of this after spending a season working at MT Hutt, which is the main ski area near ch-ch.

    I don't know whether my perception is a bit skewed here but it seems to me that a disproportionate amount of these disasters happen in less affluent/fortunate countries. As if a lot of these people don't have enough to contend with in their daily life???!!!

  11.  Quote:
    After hearing of the events, Foreign Secretary Jack Straw said: "For all the huge advances in the control of our lives through science and technology an earthquake on this scale is truly humbling as well as profoundly tragic for everyone involved."
    Now there is an intelligent observation. Thanks for the article link connackers, must be absolutely devastating for those effected.
  12. Thanks Joshnii, I was referring to the shock in Niigata but not having seen the news I wasn’t exactly sure of the specific geography.

    Actually, frannyo you apparently know where I am but it seems the temptation to be half-smart is too much to resist. If you want to keep making snide comments why don’t you make them in person, sniveling simp.

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