Close X
Sunday, November 24, 2024
ADVT 
National

Plan around challenging avalanche season: survivor

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 25 Jan, 2023 10:43 AM
  • Plan around challenging avalanche season: survivor

VANCOUVER - Twenty years after he survived being buried in a deadly avalanche in British Columbia's backcountry, Ken Wylie is urging people to be cautious and aware while dealing with a similarly unstable snowpack this year.

"Just accept this is a challenging season and make plans around that," he said from his Mill Bay home on Vancouver Island.

"And stick to the plans that you make around that. Don't let those plans erode as you kind of tickle the snowpack to ever-increasing steepness."

Wylie was one of 13 caught in the avalanche in January 2003 north of Revelstoke, B.C. Seven people died.

Experts have compared this year's snowpack, with a weak layer of sugar-like crystals buried near the bottom, to that of 2003, when avalanches in Western Canada killed 29 people, most of them in B.C.

Five people have died in three B.C. avalanches so far this January.

Avalanche Canada, a forecasting, training and safety agency, says the layers are deep enough that people are less likely to see clues of instability but there remains a serious potential for large, human-triggered avalanches.

Wylie, who was an apprentice guide in 2003, said he shoulders some responsibility for what happened during that trip, including by not listening to a group member who he said was uncomfortable with the situation prior to the avalanche.

"That accountability has brought healing, right? I don't have anything to defend or be upset about. I'm no longer the person I was that was making those decisions and choices," he said.

"I had a maturing that was required and unfortunately it took tragedy to underpin that maturing."

Wylie now offers training in risk management to help others see risks, speak up in challenging situations and make better choices.

He said people in the backcountry need to speak up if they see others in their group taking risks.

"I think that we individually, we don't want to be the killjoy," he said.

"But we're in a position as a member of a group where we're exposed to consequence, and I think it's easy to forget that."

Still, he worries that the longer B.C.'s snowpack stays the way it is, the harder it is going to be for people to make those safer choices.

"We're fundamentally impatient and we live in a society that we're constantly used to gratifying our desires instantly," he said.

"So, yeah, my opinion is that the longer this goes on, the harder it is going to be for people to make conservative choices."

Pascal Haegeli, an avalanche safety researcher at Simon Fraser University in Burnaby, B.C., said he expects the weakness in the snowpack to be around for the rest of the season.

Because of how deeply buried the weak layer is, it's unlikely to see the kind of warmer temperatures required to help snow pack more closely together, he said.

Haegeli said the extreme weather that comes with climate change is making snowpack conditions less predictable, something those who use the backcountry will have to get accustomed to when planning trips.

"It makes it harder for people who go into the backcountry to rely on their past experience to make decisions," he said.

Avalanche Canada is reminding anyone going out to the backcountry to always check the avalanche forecast, have the essential rescue gear and be trained on how to use it.

MORE National ARTICLES

Late night shooting in Burnaby lands man in hospital

Late night shooting in Burnaby lands man in hospital
RCMP is still investigating the circumstances, however there are early indications the shooting was targeted and may have involved several suspects who fled the area. Investigators are still gathering details from witnesses who were at the home at the time of the shooting.

Late night shooting in Burnaby lands man in hospital

Pilot project signals progress in Nexus impasse

Pilot project signals progress in Nexus impasse
The Canada Border Services Agency says the two countries are exploring "shorter-term measures" to shrink a backlog of applications. At the Thousand Islands crossing between Ontario and New York, in-person Nexus interviews are being conducted separately by U.S. and Canadian agents on opposite sides of the border.

Pilot project signals progress in Nexus impasse

Vancouver council votes on promised police, nurses

Vancouver council votes on promised police, nurses
The idea, which is expected to cost a total of $20 million a year, has already received significant criticism from more than two dozen people speaking against the motion at an earlier meeting.

Vancouver council votes on promised police, nurses

Prince Rupert, B.C., shooting suspect dies

Prince Rupert, B.C., shooting suspect dies
A statement from the Prince Rupert detachment says the 44-year-old man had been in critical condition following the attack on the unnamed woman at a local mall early Monday. The 52-year-old victim died before she could be taken to hospital.

Prince Rupert, B.C., shooting suspect dies

Seven B.C. commercial poultry flocks have bird flu

Seven B.C. commercial poultry flocks have bird flu
Six of the farms are in Abbotsford and one is in Chilliwack, in the Fraser Valley, the same area where more than 17 million birds were culled in 2004 when avian flu swept through numerous farms. The ministry says producers within a 10-kilometre radius have been notified and all infected farms have been placed under quarantine by the Canadian Food Inspection Agency.

Seven B.C. commercial poultry flocks have bird flu

Indecent act near Burnsview Secondary School: Delta Police

Indecent act near Burnsview Secondary School: Delta Police
Via release, the suspect is described as a South Asian or dark-skinned male, 25-30 years old with a short beard, large nose, large lips, and approximately 5'8” to 6’ tall. He was wearing a black puffer jacket, red t-shirt, black jeans, black shoes, black toque with a brown bobble on top, and with Airpods in his ears.  

Indecent act near Burnsview Secondary School: Delta Police