Close X
Saturday, November 16, 2024
ADVT 
National

Missing Snowshoer Found Dead In Avalanche Debris On Vancouver's North Shore

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 22 Feb, 2019 09:46 PM

    VANCOUVER — Searchers discovered the body of a missing snowshoer in avalanche debris on Vancouver's North Shore on Wednesday, two days after he was swept away.

     

    Peter Haigh of North Shore Rescue says searchers made the discovery on Runner Peak, north of Mount Seymour.


    He says the BC Coroners Service will investigate the cause of death but the man appears to have suffered trauma when the avalanche hit.


    The mother of the 39-year-old Surrey, B.C., snowshoer has identified him as Remi Michalowski.


    The man was hit by an avalanche on Monday that pushed his 30-year-old companion up against a tree but left him uninjured and able to call for help.


    The younger man was airlifted out of the area late Monday, while darkness and a subsequent snowstorm forced suspension of search efforts for almost 36 hours.


    Searchers with specially trained dogs returned to the challenging area Wednesday morning to search through the debris pile left by the avalanche.


    Haigh is urging hikers to be careful on the slopes.


    "Avalanches, they're so bloody dangerous and they're so unpredictable. It's very, very frustrating," he says.


    Avalanche Canada has upgraded the slide risk to "considerable" in the treeline of the south coast mountains where the man's body was found.


    A post on the Avalanche Canada website says "an unusual, weak layer makes steep and convex terrain features particularly dangerous."


    Heavy snow has fallen across southern B.C. over the last 10 days and Avalanche Canada says 30 to 50 centimetres of new snow on the south coast mountains is poorly bonded to the base, with the problem especially pronounced on the North Shore.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Justin Trudeau Wants New Relationship With Indigenous People To Be His Legacy As PM

    Justin Trudeau Wants New Relationship With Indigenous People To Be His Legacy As PM
    OTTAWA — Rebuilding Canada's relationship with Indigenous people is part of the legacy Prime Minister Justin Trudeau wants to leave, he told chiefs gathered at a major Assembly of First Nations meeting in Ottawa Tuesday afternoon.

    Justin Trudeau Wants New Relationship With Indigenous People To Be His Legacy As PM

    'He Was Trying To Run:' Calgary Stamps Player Recounts Shooting Of Teammate

    'He Was Trying To Run:' Calgary Stamps Player Recounts Shooting Of Teammate
    Calgary Stampeder's receiver DaVaris Daniels described Tuesday how a confrontation outside a bar escalated to a glass being thrown and then the fatal shooting of his friend and teammate Mylan Hicks.

    'He Was Trying To Run:' Calgary Stamps Player Recounts Shooting Of Teammate

    Canadian Panel Raps RCMP For Ignoring Jaspal Atwal As Security Threat

    Findings regarding foreign interference are largely stripped from the report for security. But it recommends that all parliamentarians be briefed upon being sworn in and regularly thereafter on the risks of foreign interference and extremism in Canada.

    Canadian Panel Raps RCMP For Ignoring Jaspal Atwal As Security Threat

    Quebec's Coalition Government Makes Good On Promise To Cut Immigration

    Quebec's Coalition Government Makes Good On Promise To Cut Immigration
    QUEBEC — The new Coalition Avenir Quebec government says it will cut immigration to the province by roughly 20 cent next year.

    Quebec's Coalition Government Makes Good On Promise To Cut Immigration

    Newborn Baby Dies In Hospital After Being Found In Dumpster In Mission, B.C.

    MISSION, B.C. — Police say a newborn baby girl has died in hospital after being found in a dumpster last month in Mission, B.C.

    Newborn Baby Dies In Hospital After Being Found In Dumpster In Mission, B.C.

    B.C. Up Fines For Off-Road Vehicles And Snowmobiles In Sensitive Habitats

    Fines are going up for anyone who uses off-road vehicles and snowmobiles in environmentally sensitive areas of British Columbia. Anyone operating the vehicles in those areas will face a $575 fine, effectively immediately.

    B.C. Up Fines For Off-Road Vehicles And Snowmobiles In Sensitive Habitats