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Is video sharing increasing danger of injury

  • runningclouds
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13 years 11 months ago #204100 by runningclouds
Replied by runningclouds on topic Re: Is video sharing increasing danger of injury
Avalanche Guys rock, thanks for the intro Baltoro. I enjoyed few videos yesterday, kind of wish someone was doing something similar for the Cascades or SW BC.

I think I have to specify that that I was thinking specifically about the helmet or chest mounted cams, Hero Pro and similar. They have pretty wide fixed lenses, so the cameraman has to ski very close, 3-5 turns, to catch the action. Otherwise the front skier looks like an ant.

And yes I am aware the phenomena is not new, it just seem the competition is far wider than ever. And yes I think some people do get the extra motivation because of the easy to reach audience on the internet.

I have read Bruce's book and articles and I have a respect for his expertise. I found his remark a bit surprising because it just might be that he is seeing a new issue to deal with when making decisions in an avy terrain. Maybe there will be a new chapter in the next edition of Staying Alive in Avalanche Terrain; Don't Be A Hero Pro.

I think it is becoming an issue for some groups, whether there are statistics to back it up or not. In any case the statistics will trail reality by few years.

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  • runningclouds
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9 years 4 months ago #227381 by runningclouds
Replied by runningclouds on topic Re: Is video sharing increasing danger of injury
Avalanche educators grapple with social media’s influence on backcountry travelers’ decision making

Emery Rheam’s video showed teenagers spinning backflips into deep powder blanketing an avalanche starting zone on Teton Pass in Wyoming.

The thousand people watching in the Breckenridge conference center — snow scientists and guides gathered last week for the annual International Snow Science Workshop — winced, shook their heads and grumbled.

Those kids, Rheam said, raced down the slope and posted their exploits online, feeding a game of one-upmanship that puts them in competition not just with each other, but the entire internet. It’s a scenario that plays out on social feeds, but has real-life consequences that worry avalanche forecasters and educators.

It’s too easy for an older generation to pooh-pooh social media. That’s especially common among graying avalanche forecasters and educators who often sit in judgment of what they see in movies and on Instagram, Facebook or Twitter.


www.denverpost.com/2016/10/10/colorado-a...arding-social-media/

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  • Randito
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9 years 4 months ago #227383 by Randito
Essentially everything old is new again

www.alpenglow.org/skiing/silver-skis-2005/

People competing with each other and pushing each other to take high risks that result in injuries and death seems to be a long standing pattern in human behavior. Whether the media is paper or digital signals.

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  • Charlie Hagedorn
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9 years 4 months ago #227384 by Charlie Hagedorn
Replied by Charlie Hagedorn on topic Re: Is video sharing increasing danger of injury

Avalanche Guys rock, thanks for the intro Baltoro. I enjoyed few videos yesterday, kind of wish someone was doing something similar for the Cascades or SW BC.


You're in luck; while the Gallatin Avalanche Center was a pioneer, most (all?) of the US avalanche centers now have similar products, updated at differing rates.

NWAC's Youtube channel:
www.youtube.com/channel/UCXKN3Cu9rnnkukkiUUgjzFQ/videos

For completeness:
UAC Youtube:
www.youtube.com/user/utahavalanchecenter/videos

CAIC Youtube:
www.youtube.com/user/CoAvalancheInfoCente/videos

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  • filbo
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9 years 4 months ago - 9 years 4 months ago #227387 by filbo
Every time the Kodak clicks you lose a little bit of your soul.   John Prine, one of his songs.

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  • Griff
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9 years 4 months ago #227393 by Griff
The cams that I use to catch footage are just there for documentary purposes only and never affect any decision on what we ski or avalanche analysis. If it does you will wind up dead.

My goal is always to ski, and get footage along the way, not the other way around. Yes, it makes hard to get good footage cause skiing comes first, and sometime you just can't stop.

Best example of that last year cam at Targhee. There for a IFSA CFS comp with CU Boulder son. We got an early load up the chair at 8:30 AM after it had dumped over 20 inches that night. The venue required a short cat ride another 500 vertical feet and only 20 people at a time but there about 30 of us.

So the first competitors got on and the Patrol said we could ski. I had my cams but they were packed away. But we realized that we just got the greenlight for a killer run or two if we went fast.........no time for the cams..........."let's rock". And we did, two runs down 20 inches over a perfectly smooth groomed base. Man was it fun.

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