Monday, 21 January 2013

Avalanche Education & Funding

In most countries where avalanche accidents occur the conclusion is that education to prevent tragic accidents is the key.  In Scotland you pay to get such training and even if its a token sum its been subsidised by goodwill in time and loaned equipment for the avalanche training, or you rely on the good will of sponsors, trusts or companies who have to be asked to help. In the current economic downturn thats getting harder to keep up.  Mountain safety budgets are almost non existant so winter lecture series become unviable and lecturers most often professionals need paid something and often travel long ways to give talks.

Three years ago Anatom Ltd/BCA were kind enough to donate free to Nevis Range and Glencoe Mountain the electronics for avalanche training parks, and the ski areas donated a patch of ground to use.  This year after writing many letters I finally nailed down funding from a small trust called "The Mill Cottage Trust" to replace the Glencoe park with a new (still in development) wireless beacon park that also can be used for Recco (another search system) for training.  Basically though there is no money to take these things forward.  I can't even raise £300 to get signs made for these parks, or simple aids that can be put out like "Beacon Checkers" for out of bounds skiers. Maybe even at key outside locations avalanche bulleting boards as there used to be in Glencoe. The was no ignoring the bright pink signs saying "Avalanche" when Hamish had Willie Elliot put them out.

Scottish MR earns and deserves every penny and more of it's £250,000 funding from the Scottish government. The SAIS is a World class avalanche reporting service financed by the Scottish government.   But who has secure funding for avalanche education?  The answer is simple - no one.  We have superb forecasting which plays a huge part, and a superb voluntary (and RAF mountain rescue service) as well as ski patrols who are often ignored yet play a big part in keeping the public safe in the over the back climbing areas such as Nevis Range and Glencoe.  Surely we should complete the circle and get back to trying to prevent avalanche tragedies.

It's a terrible analogy I know, and I  hope it's taken the right way; funding the undertakers is a sign of failure when we should be curing the illness. What I really mean is that investment in mountain safety preventing avalanche tragedies gets forgotten in the rush to do something. The MC of S and Snowsport Scotland certainly do a lot, but I bet they could do more if they could fund more. Education and training is the key surely.  It certainly won't stop tragedies entirely, but if it even prevents one future avalanche disaster as big as last weekends, then it's worth it.  I guess its all a bit close to me now hence the rant as Chris Bell was a guy I liked even though he could whip me everytime in race.  I have been asked to give two Avalanche safety talks in the next month and will dedicate them to this fine young man who along with these other bright young folks lost there lives.

I guess I better get back to scrounging for beacon park signs and stuff to keep them viable.  I have no budget!
The Old Fox doing Beacon Training at Glencoe's Free Training Park

Tuesday, 15 January 2013

Avalanches, Airbags and Rice Crispies


The Backcountry Access Float 32 is designed for pros, guides, and dedicated backcountry skiing and snowboarding junkies carrying the full quiver of essentials. The Float 32 will carry all your common winter backcountry tools while supplying ample space for a first-aid kit, glacier travel equipment, and even supplies for extended multi-day trips. The trigger can be set in either the left or right shoulder strap, is hydration compatible, and the airbag system is removable, making it the most versatile airbag backpack on the market.

Durable 330 Double Rip-Stop and 840 Ballistic Nylon
Volume: 1,593 cubic inches / 32 liters
Weight: 6.4 pounds / 2,903 grams including cylinder
Warranty: 3 years
Colour: Red
Bag Height: 23" / 58.5 cm
Bag Width: 11.5" / 29 cm


The Backcountry Access Float 22 is designed for out-of-bounds, off-piste, freeride and mechanized skiing and snowboarding. Creating buoyancy and helping you float to the surface, the 150-liter airbag not only decreases your burial depth but also protects your head and neck from trauma in an avalanche. The lightest and most affordable airbag backpack available, the Float 22 will easily carry your winter rescue tools, lunch, water, and extra layer for a full day in the backcountry. New for the 2012/2013 season, BCA's Float system is now removable and interchangeable between packs. BCA's 165 authorized refill locations around the world make it the easiest refillable airbag system on the market.

Durable 330 Double Rip-stop and 840 Ballistic Nylon
Volume: 1,343 cubic inches / 22 liters
Weight: 5.5 pounds / 2,495 grams including cylinder
Warranty: 3 years
Colour: Available in blue/yellow and black
Bag Height: 19"  / 48 cm
Bag Width: 10" /25.5 cm


The Float Airbag system does not guarantee survival in an avalanche incident.  Educate yourself, make good decisions, and know before you go.                                                                                              


Sold separately for 2012/13. Comes with Consumer Refill Kit. Shipped full unless requested empty by dealer. DOT, TC, and TUV certified.  BCA has a rapidly expanding network of convenient Float refill and cylinder exchange centers.  For central Scotland and the West Coast your nearest refill centre is at Glencoe www.crankitupgear.com  tel 01855811 694 mob 07746860023        

Be in no doubt airbags are lifesavers hugely increasing your chance of surviving an avalanche by keeping you on the surface. The big advantage of the BCA system is using compressed air to inflate the bag and ease of refill through a local refill centre.  Many other manufacturers are moving to compressed air systems, but unlike BCA they do not ship refillable cylinders to the UK market only north America.  However, should you have a refillable air cylinder regardless of make I will fill it for you.  Please replace your "O" rings using the supplied kit.  For Anatom/Crankitupgear customers a refill only with "O" ring replaced will be only £5.  £10 if we have to replace the "O" ring.  All other customers £10 a refill.  It's always worth a trial pop of your bag to get a feel for the trigger and importantly for learning to re-pack the air bag.

If you want a good Beacon then the DTS 2 is the one for you. North America's best-selling avalanche transceiver. BCA's Tracker2 offers the industry's fastest, most precise pinpointing, with triple receive antenna, instantaneous real-time display, and the same easy-to-use interface as the Tracker DTS. An intuitive mechanical search/transmit switch makes it easy to use right "out of the box." Thinner profile and harness than the Tracker DTS. This beacon includes Special Mode and multiple burial indicator lights.  

Avoiding Avalanches is always a better idea.  Clachaig Inn have gained sponsorship for four winter safety lectures through Febuary 2013.  Well worth attending. If you require some on snow training at one of the Anatom/BCA Beacon parks at Nevis Range or Glencoe, or snow safety training in Scotland then give me a call on the numbers above or email. Internationally go to the BCA educators list at www.backcountryaccess.com educators where you will also see me listed.




My lecture for the 19th Feb is on avalanche avoidance and companion rescue and called  "Snap, Crackle and Pop". Come and have a beer.


Saturday, 22 December 2012

Avalanche Airbag Thoughts


I have been selling and doing demos of the BCA range since they first came out. This year there has been a huge interest. Partly because research and evidence all supports the fact that the probability of surviving an avalanche as a skier especially is vastly improved if you have one. Maybe as much as 90%+. The fact that you stay on the surface (avoid terrain traps as they are an exception) and you are so visible to spotters saves search and digging time (don't loose sight of your friends). Huge dumps of snow in the Alps already this season along with many near misses and airbag saves and sadly lives lost has all made folk think about airbags.

Pisteur at Les Orres from last week saved by his ABS doing Avlx control work.
I worked for a month at Les Orres teaching skiing for "ski bound" back in the day
I am an avalanche avoider make no mistake.  Having been at the digging end on many occasions there isn't much good experience to bring to the table from MR from any way I look at it either educationally or experiential, but Ski Patrol there is. Having done six seasons as a ski rescuer being paid to be sharp about avalanches, and still involved through BASP and helping out now and then at Glencoe its not hard to see that unlike MR if you get to folk quickly the result is much better.  I like skiing off piste but know that no matter how experienced (which is the sum total of near misses) its only a matter of time if you keep doing it before you get panned and it's happened to me before making me a lot more reluctant to decide in haste and repent at leisure.  If I have an airbag will it make me think I can ski slopes I would otherwise avoid?  I would like to think and truly hope not.  It might prevent burial but it wouldn't help with the trauma and I need my knees for bike racing.

Sron a Creis West aspect Jan 1st 1984.  Like navvies digging concrete. No expertise required.
Now I should say that over the last three years life has conspired to make me a Scotland only skier. Fiona and I have both worked full ski seasons abroad as ski teachers pre family and had long ski trips for 2/3 weeks to various alpine ski areas.  We even managed a few trips with the kids to Tignes, Meribel, La Tania etc.  The last 3 years has thrown Fiona and us as a family the curve ball of breast cancer and all the post cancer/remission baggage that only families living with it can truly understand. My family wouldn't stop me doing anything, but its never far from my mind when hugging someones wheel  in a road race or hurtling over a bank in an XC race, and of course skiing over the backs, that they don't need anymore shit. The family don't ask me to change my risk appetite and stop me enjoying my sports, but I feel that if there's something to help reduce the consequences of  my head writing cheques my body can't cash then I should have it. I can slow down on the bike, but I can't change mother natures revenge if I make a bad decision other than try and "Float" above it.

Bobby and I may have triggered this from above.
You never know what's below you in a hoolie!
So I have an airbag.  A Float 22.  I hope to avoid ever having to pop it in anger. Feel free to take the piss in lift ques and I will try and not blow up in your face!
Yes its that Blue!!!



Thursday, 29 November 2012

The Ascending Spiral & Luck!

As the risk of gloom and doom here is an excellent article first published in "The Avalanche Review" (TAR) which is the American Avalanche Association's newsletter. While we all gear up for the coming season I will put a few more things of interest up. We could easily talk ourselves out of ever skiing a line or doing a tour, but and it's a big but - these insights into how we think or should begin to think are constructive ways to avoid thinking traps (heuristics) and "risk complacency" (risk homeostasis). I have added a few photos of my own just to break up the narrative as its quite wordy.

Note: Ed LaChapelle was born in 1926 in Tacoma, Washington. He spent two years in the U.S. Navy 1944-46 as an electronic technician, then graduated in math and physics from the University of Puget Sound in 1949. Professionally he has been a guest worker at the Swiss Avalanche Institute 1950-51, a snow ranger with USFS at Alta, 1952-72, done glacier research in Greenland and Alaska 1952-1956,and on the Blue Glacier on Mt. Olympus 1957-1970. He was appointed to the faculty of the University of Washington in 1967, retired as Professor Emeritus of Geophysics and Atmospheric Sciences in 1982. He has been active in snow and avalanche affairs for all of his professional life, including retirement.
                                                   
The  Ascending Spiral  by Ed LaChapelle
                     
Decisions, decisions.......the February issue of TAR spoke from several  informative points of view and the editor invited a dialog.  Here is one contribution to the perpetual questions of how to evaluate avalanche hazards, consider human factors and communicate (or execute) decisions. Here is what I mean by the title.  Rather than seeing our mastery of snow and avalanche science and decision-making as linear progression, I see it as the same issues and ideas coming around again and again, but each time at a  more sophisticated and technically advanced level, hence the ascending  spiral. I take as my theme the wisdom that Whymper (1871) handed to us many years ago.  He spoke of mountaineering in general, but his words are just as cogent today in this “decision” context: “Climb if you will but remember that courage and strength are naught without prudence, and  that a momentary negligence may destroy the happiness of a lifetime.  Do nothing in haste, look well to each step; and from the beginning think what might be the end.”
Edward Whymper "Do Nothing In Haste"was a  little luckier than his companions on the Matterhorn

 “Do nothing in haste”......this speaks loud and clear to the pressures of time,  planning and economics, plus the perpetual urge to action that drives so  much of our modern life.  Here is where the human factor in avalanche related decisions comes to the fore.  And this brings us to Elbert’s Rule. When I first worked at Alta in the 1950’s, the daily mail was brought up the Little Cottonwood Canyon road by Elbert Despain, who had been doing this for many years, continued doing it for many years and was still carrying the mail  at age 90, when he achieved the distinction of being the oldest mail carrier in  the United States.  As we all know, that canyon is beset by a horrendous series of avalanches.  I once asked Elbert how he managed to miss getting caught in an avalanche in all that time.  His answer was the epitome of common sense: “After a heavy fall of new snow, wait two days.” Note that even the United States Mail, famed for a high determination to deliver, could at least in those times wait two days.  Elbert was mostly dealing with natural releases where his Rule is hard to beat.  Artificial releases, intended or accidental, can stretch out the safety wait depending on snow conditions, but the concept of giving the landscape a chance to stabilize, “do nothing in haste”, points to the fundamental problem of including the human factor in  decisions. The idea of waiting two days, or almost any kind of wait, just doesn’t fit today’s activities in avalanche terrain.  Is there a heli-ski manager who can get away with asking his guests to wait two days before skiing 50 cm of new powder? No way!  A ski area operator who will close half his runs in similar circumstances, or a highway foreman who will garage his plows until the snow sets up?  Only in dreamland!  The basic human problem with decisions in avalanche terrain is not so much personal attitudes, group interactions or risk management.  It is the expectation that human activities can be scheduled by artificial constructs like calendar and clock in a natural world that moves at its own independent pace.  A weekend ski tour is not going to be put off until Monday because a snow dump on Friday created avalanche hazard and we might as well adapt to this behavior.  But at least recognize the root of the problem in training for decision-making.  That tour might still take place on a hazardous weekend, but with a revised destination.

 “Look well to each step” covers many individual actions or observations on the way to acquiring bases for decisions.  Here I will look at a couple in detail.   First, there is the eternal business of digging snow pits...how many, how  often, where and in what detail (the ascending spiral is spinning fast here). McCammon and Sharaf (2005) cite Peter Schaerer’s sensible admonition to be quick, an approach to snow pits I can readily endorse.  Let’s look closer at this whole pit digging business, one that sometimes can become the tail that wags the very large dog of avalanche data collection.  Snow pit digging is a necessary but far from sufficient action to understand snow stability.  If it is only part of the picture why does it so often come so much to the fore?  I suggest that this is because we can observe and record a select body of detail like crystal type and size, hardness, density, layer thickness, etc. And why do we record these particular features?  Because they are readily rendered into numerical values and logged in notebooks, an act that may convey comfort in having acquired “objective” data but not always be what we need to know.  For example, rate of change of viscosity in a snow layer might be more informative, but this is a tough one in a cold laboratory and impossible in the field.  So, we are often led down the easy primose path of the possible. Let me put forth the heretical notion that we do not need more data from a given snow pit, but less.  The act itself of digging with a shovel is the culmination of the Schaerer Quick Pit concept.  By the time I have finished digging a snow pit, I usually know about 90% of what I am going to find from it about snow stability.  
Glencoe Feb 2009 same day as pic of Aonach Dubh (below) which was taken on the way up to ski.
A quick pit with easy shears at 30cm on buried hoar.  
Not a hard thing to do. Cat 4 High SAIS yet climbers in the classic gullies of ScNL!
Logging pit details is a good educational tool and expands knowledge about a wide range of snow properties, but should not be confused with the backbone of avalanche forecasting. In the larger picture of snow stability, snow pits provide a quick but static snapshot of conditions at a given time and place.  From the external perspective of a passing observer, snow on a mountainside is just sitting there, apparently dormant.  The snow cover, however, is neither static nor dormant, but a positively seething mass of activity.  Snow is constantly gliding, creeping and settling.  Layer by layer the physical properties are constantly changing as crystals metamorphose.  Waves of changing temperature sweep through the snow cover while radiation works at the surface.  Snowfall and wind drifting change the amount and distribution of loading with each passing storm.  Understanding the complex behavior of snow is a problem in rheology, the science of deformation and flow of matter.  In this case the problem is further compounded by the matter in question being a granular visco-elastic solid close to its melting point.  You can’t make it much more complicated than that. 

The observational role of the snow pit in all this compared with a broader and more lengthy data collection is clarified by a concept in rheology put forth by Meiner (1964), the Deborah Number.  Meiner  pointed out the significance of the Prophetess Deborah singing that “the mountains flowed before the Lord”.  In the limited time frame of human perception, the mountains are static and eternal, but for the Lord, whose time frame is infinite, they flow. Meiner defined the non-dimensional Deborah Number as follows:

D = time of relaxation/time of observation

 A high Deborah Number means the subject in question appears to an observer to be a static and unchanging solid.  The brief observation from a snow pit implies a high D snow cover and hence a static view of what actually is an active (“flowing”) snow cover.  To gain insights into the dynamic character of the latter, observations extended in time are needed to lower the value of D. In other words, stability evaluation has to be an on-going process, the longer the better. Ideally, the estimate of snow stability evaluation on a given avalanche path begins with the first snowfall of winter.  More about this in a moment.

A second relevant action, consulting some sort of checklist, appears when George (2005) describes the NivoTest.  This is where the ascending spiral really starts to spin.  Check list have been around for a long time and in various formats and the NivoTest stands out as possibly the most sophisticated one to date.  Looking into history, the earliest check list I can find is G. Bilgeri’s Six Points (three for terrain, three for snow conditions) already in use by the 1930’s, described by Seligman (1936).  Later, as one example, we have Atwater’s (1952) Ten Contributory Factors, initially with equal weight but later informally modified by various weighting schemes. I like the NivoTest because it nicely condenses terrain, snow features, current avalanche activity and human factors.  However, it is disquieting to see it illustrated in TAR by a photo of a guide consulting it in the field in the middle of what appears to be avalanche terrain.  This brings the checklist concept into play far, far, too late.  If you wait until standing on the edge of an avalanche path before considering snow stability and risks, very poor decisions can ensue. Again, evaluating snow conditions is an ongoing process, not a single event (reduce the Deborah Number!). The NivoTest, or any similar scheme, needs to be constantly in play days prior to any avalanche exposure, when evolving weather conditions contribute to the checks. Early entries to the NivoTest may be hazy as to detail, but even then a picture will start to evolve than can be constantly updated until the final moment of  decision in avalanche terrain. 

Seligman (op. cit.) nearly seventy years ago placed strong emphasis on anticipating snow conditions from weather patterns long before going into the field.  More recently I have made the same point (LaChapelle, 1980). Of course, the weakness of any checklist system is the risk of rigidity and thus locking out unusual thinking demanded by unusual conditions.  Whether a  NivoTest or any other scheme, check lists have to be reminders and not  substitutes for constantly paying attention to a wide spectrum of clues  about snow behavior.  I view George’s mention of mandated us to use checklists like the NivoTest with much alarm.  Plantiff’s lawyers can have a field day with mandates.

Among the various TAR articles about decisions, only Stewart-Patterson mentioned luck, where he named it one of the three main factors in decision-making, though only in passing.  This topic needs wider recognition.  Let’s face it, most of us in the avalanche game have been saved many times over by luck.  George (op. cit.) mentions that even experts say they are right only 50% of the time.  Now we know that experts don’t get caught in avalanches 50% of the time, so the obvious conclusion must be that luck along with undocumented skills is right in there as a major player.  This is not surprising when we consider that most places and most times the alpine snow cover is stable in the face of normal triggering forces.  The whole business of evaluating snow stability and making decisions hinges on recognizing those fewer times when it is not.  Thus the odds more often favor a mistake on the safe side than one that raises risk.  Of course, by random chance, bad luck as well as good can follow even the most skilled and careful decisions. “... from the beginning, think what might be the end.”  This really gets to the heart of the matter, emphasizing the idea of stability evaluation as an ongoing and continuous process mentioned above.  Whymper spoke to anticipating risks in mountaineering: his words speak with equal force to anticipating risks in avalanche terrain.  Here is where the experts get sorted out from the beginners.  My idea of an expert is a person who constantly follows evolution of the snow cover and repeatedly thinks ahead to “what might be the end” for one risk situation after another.  The end might be an avalanche fall, and even more important might be consequence of an avalanche fall.  I learned this many years ago from Andre Roch (personal communication) who pointed out that two questions are involved.  First, will an avalanche occur, and, second it if does occur what will be the resulting risk?  For example, a small avalanche poses much less risk to a skier if it has a gentle outrun onto safe ground than it does if it carries a victim over a cliff or into a crevasse.
Luck! W. Face Aonach Dubh Feb 2009 A 500m x 1m to 2.5m crown wall visible high up on the ridge line.

Anyone climbing the classic ice gullies on the day this spontaneous release occurred would have been 

buried in the lower terrain traps where depths exceeded 20m
The whole business of expertise is examined by Conger (2005), who allots analytical skills in decision-making to persons ranging from novice to proficient, but reserves the role of intuition for experts.  He is onto something here, raising the whole question of just what constitutes intuition.   Perhaps this is a case of of not being able to define intuition but being able to recognize it when we see or exercise it.  Certainly we can all recognize the  “seat-of-the-pants” factor in evaluating snow stability, but just what do we mean?  Here I will make a try at answering this question and defining intuition in this context. To begin, consider what intuition is not.  It is not some magical quality bestowed on mature people of wide experience along with gray hair and slowing reflexes.  It is not some sort of extra-sensory perception; quite the contrary.  Intuition is the lifetime accumulation of precisely those sensory perceptions of snow, weather and avalanche behavior that have accumulated, often in the sub-conscious, that cannot readily be quantified, logged in a  notebook or clearly explained.  Such perceptions, nevertheless, are based on the physical behavior of the real world, not on vague mental constructs.  An example is the meteorological perception of a mountain snowstorm evolution based on subtle changes in the spectral distribution of light filtering through clouds as the sun descends in the sky and cloud layers come and go in shifting fashion.  No doubt a wide-spectrum recording light sensor could construct graphic records of these changes and eventually build a quantitative document.  But the expert integrates all this under the guise of intuition and recognizes the likely next storm trend. Here is another example from my own experience.  I once was involved in a field training program for heli-ski guides.  The exercise was preceded by a very light fall of fluffy snow, followed by a substantial fall of mixed snow types and mid-range densities.  This combination produced widespread instability with the fluff acting as lubricating layer.  Two days of field training produced ski releases everywhere, excellent for demonstrating how, and how not, to test ski an avalanche path.  On the third day the first helicopter flight took several of us to a ridge top.  One of the experienced guides skied 100 yards down the ridge and stopped.  I followed close behind and joined him.  He turned and said, “There is no tension in the snow today”.  I replied, “I agree”.  That day-long exercise never started another ski release no matter how hard we tried.  So here were a couple of presumed “experts” putting their intuition accurately to work.  What did we actually sense about the snow?  We can throw around words like kinesthetic perception and psycho-rheology, but what we actually had was many years of experience with the way our skis and legs reacted to snow structure, accumulating this experience somewhere in our heads.  Did we actually experience “tension” as physics would define it?  Probably not, this is another convenient word to toss around, but we both knew what we meant.  How many readers of TAR know what we meant? As the spiral ascends and scientific and technical knowledge about snow continues to grow, are we coming closer to improved training and safety practices for avalanche risk management?  Or are we locked into Wilde’s  (1994) risk homeostasis trap?  The dialog needs to continue.

References

Atwater, M. & F. Koziol, 1952.  Avalanche Handbook, U.S. Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, 146 pp.
Conger, S., 2005.  Learning to Decide: On Becoming an Expert, TAR, Vol. 23, No. 3

George, D., 2005.  Natural Born Risk Takers,TAR, Vol. 23, No. 3

LaChapelle, E., 1980.  Fundamental Processes in Conventional Avalanche Forecasting, J. of Glac. Vol.26, No. 94

McCammon, I. & D. Sharaf, 2005.  Integrating Strength, Energy and Structure into Stability Decisions, TAR, Vol. 23, No. 3

Meiner, R., 1964.  From an after-dinner talk presented at the International Congress on Rheology, Providence, R.I., In: Physics Today, January 1964

Seligman, G., 1936.  Snow Structure and Ski Fields, Macmillan, London 555  pp.

Stewart-Patterson, I., 2005. Developing Good Decisions, TAR Vol. 23, No. 3

Whymper, E., 1871. Scrambles Amongst the Alps in the Years 1860-69, John  Murray, London, 432 pp.

Wilde, G., 1994.  Target Risk, PDE Publications, Toronto, 243 pp.
Bottom of No 2 Gully Filled up from above slide on Aonach Dubh. Depth approx 20m


Saturday, 24 November 2012

Local Sponsorship Opportunity

Any local business want an advertising opportunity? Currently the mountain safety avalanche training park in Glencoe has no education signage.  As an example the Nevis Range park is shown. You could have your business details on the signs if you were prepared to sponsor the cost of the signs which is £250


Glencoe Park without  Signs and Fencing
Part of the Nevis Range Park with Educational Signs