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February 22, 2014, Chair Peak Large Avalanche
- avajane
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- prestonf
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- silaswild
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- Charlie Hagedorn
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In the meantime, I don't think the folks involved owe the internet anything if they don't feel like it.
Agreed. Even if the party does decide to post about it, there's no rush.
Super glad only skis were lost; hope no one else was below along frequently-traveled routes.
Thanks to those (perhaps the party itself) who reported the slide to NWAC for getting the word out.
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- Marcus
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- avajane
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Is chair peak concidered a safe treed terrain or a hazzardous avy terrain objective?
One mans safe...
Not the kind of position I would intentionally put myself in right now. I'm skinning roads, hiding in trees, and skiing low angle ridge lines. Yesterday it sucked - today I found fantastic snow. There is good stuff to be found in relatively safe areas, but I guess you have to know where they are.
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- aaron_wright
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If I'm guessing right, this is the slope that slid. Skiers were perhaps on the bench/ridge lower left?
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- Marcus
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- SquakMtn
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When conditions are right, skiing that chute to the lake can be sublime but it is an obvious major avy path which should be avoided when hazard is considerable.
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- T. Eastman
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- Griff
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The route through Bryant colouir is the normal route and is where the skiers are in the pics. You really can't make that bench due to hazard on the other side.
I am glad no one was killed below them at the lake. Some friends headed that way at noon.
My takeaway is that one just never knows, especially with the weird winter we have seen.
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- T. Eastman
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- Snoqualmonix
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Chair peak is just over 6200', the living snoqualmie story (which is written by a local blogger here in the valley, and though a great piece of sometimes local news/gossip, is not a stand alone source of news) stated the slide ran from 6200' on the north aspect. If this is accurate this means the north face, a popular alpine climbing route, went above the party. And if this is accurate, they were trapped in an exposed area which had greater consequences for them than the slope/slab/angle/tress vs. open slope we're quick to jump to.
After enjoying the storm of the season here last week, I had the good fortune to spend the last two day in the baker bc while teaching some courses that heavily discussed red flags and terrain selection. If this party's observations were similar to mine, there might have been different days in which they were shocked by the stability observed and tested relative to obvious flags created from the storm #'s and avy forecast and as such, used their judgement and experience to venture beyond the 20 degree woods. If if this has any accuracy, then a reminder is good for all of us that terrain traps live heavily above us too. But then again, I am also speculating.
Griff, sorry brother, but your geography's a bit off. Skiers in photo are under the NE buttress of chair, venturing out under north face. They would have come from chair east basin (above source), which is behind them and down a few 100'. Bryant couloir leaves from source basin, but can take you up and around behind chair (if doing clockwise circumnav). None of those zones around Source/Chair east basin should be considered "safe" to play in by any stretch of the imagination, but instead a shooting gallery of 5+ active slide paths IMO. I do agree that one never knows, that's the magic of it when the science stops! Glad you and the flying kid were out getting after it, perhaps ill see you before the April powder storms this year!
Be safe y'all, study hard, look for yourself and point your tips and be brave!
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- Griff
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We had a great time on the east side of Chair on Saturday, take a look.
Oh it sounds like G is taking another class this spring at the club. COOL!! Maybe I will come down and get in to shape. UGH!
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- mattgoyer
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- alpentalcorey
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- Mattski
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- 10'crown-skier impact maxes out at 3' down
- Snowpack observations and tests rarely go deeper than 6'
This slab might represent the entire recent storm snow at and above treeline in the Snoq Pass zone where there is no telemetry to look for actual storm totals and winds. This might be similar to the very large slides that came off the Shuksan arm in the 98/99 season which ran multiple times and the MLK crust from that season. The crust posed the risk of large storms lingering until they were 8-15' deep then failed naturally.
Very difficult to understand the circumstances of the group's position and decision making without a firsthand account. It does speak to the issue of terrain choice right now regarding at and above treeline North facing terrain with a deeply buried raincrust with large storm & wind slabs now above.
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- Charlie Hagedorn
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Did the slide really happen at midnight?
If you look at the rest of the list,
www.nwac.us/observations/
every event occurs at "midnight", perhaps an artifact of the underlying data structure. In the comments for the Chair Peak slide, they lead off with "12:00 PM", presumably noon-ish.
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- alpentalcorey
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- PS44
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... so essentially playing roulette is cool as long as you are lucky...
I agree with this sentiment. The north side of Chair Peak in my opinion is a no go zone after recent massive snowfall, without giving the snowpack a day or two (or a week) to consolidate, and with possible buried unstable layers.
The area above Source Lake towards the Chair Peak should be treated very cautiously; I have seen massive debris piles filling up the entire Source Lake basin with car-sized slab chunks. Glad everybody is alive with a story to tell...
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- tabski
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- Splitter
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- JoshK
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Based on limited facts available it appears poor decision making played a part. The rush to judgement makes me uncomfortable because I own it as much as anyone and while it may be accurate in this case, it is so easy to be wrong. Better to hold out a hand than start swinging a stick.
Agreed. Considering the lack of reply from those involved (I refuse to believe they don't at least view this site), I would imagine there is an element of embarrassment involved that is leading them to remain quiet. Speculation, armchair QBing and the like probably won't encourage people to speak up.
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- T. Eastman
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Speculation, armchair QBing and the like probably won't encourage people to speak up.
Should they be coddled and given stars?
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- jj
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Should they be coddled and given stars?
I don't think anyone has suggested coddling or handing out stars. Rather, it is a question of whether we should give people the benefit of the doubt or assume the worst when we discuss an event for which we don't know the facts.
For what it's worth, it looks like many folks have been caught unexpectedly by slides from above their position. See the NWAC Observation on February 24 for another example. If this was also the case for the 2/22 event perhaps it's more forgivable than we might otherwise assume.
However, to directly answer your question... I guess the degree to which we make this a comfortable place for the 2/22 event skiers to tell their story depends on how badly we want to get more information. I am willing to defer judgement to the extent that it results in more information that we can all use to make sound backcountry decisions.
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- T. Eastman
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- A boatload of snow over the past week or so, and
- Much of that snow was delivered with wind, and
- The terrain is relatively steep, and
- Bonding of layers deep in the snowpack has been suspect for much of the winter.
This information is primarily non-scientific, area-wide, and can generate a go/no-go decision, or a choice to ski less threatening terrain.
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- Gregg_C
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sportgevity.com/article/changing-culture-shame-0
If we take a systems error approach to analyzing events we will have a setting where more knowledge and incite will be gained. I have been guilty of making quick judgement in the past and I have recently come to the understanding that many of us have had the experience of making poor decisions. My poor decisions would certainly have seemed foolhardy to others in hindsight. Nobody wants to be embarrassed publicly or called out as being stupid. We are engaged in an activity that is potentially quite harmful. The risks can never be reduced to nil. However, lets try and learn as much as possible about events so our collective knowledge for ALL backcountry users is improved.
Here is a link to an excellent post that discusses this issue surrounding events in BC.
www.backcountrybc.org/2013_12_25_archive.html
Gregg Cronn
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- aaron_wright
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- LukerBee
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... If this was also the case for the 2/23 event perhaps it's more forgivable than we might otherwise assume.
However, to directly answer your question... I guess the degree to which we make this a comfortable place for the 2/23 event skiers to tell their story depends on how badly we want to get more information....
Was there an avalanche at Chair on 2/22 and 2/23?
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- Griff
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I would suggest that this forum should be an area for all backcountry enthusiasts to learn as much as possible about avalanche events. If it is going to be a rant session then so be it. Personally, and professionally as an AIARE instructor, I would like everyone to post the details of events and near misses without others making comments as to the soundness of their decisions. Read the article below.
sportgevity.com/article/changing-culture-shame-0
If we take a systems error approach to analyzing events we will have a setting where more knowledge and incite will be gained. I have been guilty of making quick judgement in the past and I have recently come to the understanding that many of us have had the experience of making poor decisions. My poor decisions would certainly have seemed foolhardy to others in hindsight. Nobody wants to be embarrassed publicly or called out as being stupid. We are engaged in an activity that is potentially quite harmful. The risks can never be reduced to nil. However, lets try and learn as much as possible about events so our collective knowledge for ALL backcountry users is improved.
Here is a link to an excellent post that discusses this issue surrounding events in BC.
www.backcountrybc.org/2013_12_25_archive.html
Gregg Cronn
Thank you bro. This is the real reason this community exists. Not to use strongly worded posts that say "WTF were you thinking?".
I have a regular post on my Team's Facebook page on Friday's called "Come Back for Another Day" and deeply believe that is "right" perspective for me and the folks I climb with (primarily my son) to have. I started in 1984 and want to keep comin back until the day I die from something other than an avy.
My post from this past Friday was simply "a lot of new snow, high avy warning by NWAC, good weekend to be smart". I was also out on Friday in the Alpy BC so felt like I had a good feeling for the snow. That does not mean though that I felt "safe".
So heading up a short way in less then 20-25 degree slopes was within my danger spectrum. Climbing higher, or under cornices or onto steep terrain was not. My son jumping off a cliff was not steep terrain per se. LOL.
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