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One of several survivors of the '99 Grouse Grind AvalancheZZ

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发表于 2005-12-1 18:35:10 | 显示全部楼层 |阅读模式

One of several survivors of the '99 Grouse Grind Avalanche, this subject was buried up to his head and suffered severe injuries. This victim was quickly extricated to a nearby safe area, where he was treated for hypothermia, two fractured legs and shock, with intravenous therapy and morphine.


Class 3 Avalanche


Class 4 Avalanche



Probe line at Mt.Baker - search for avalanche victims (1999)
发表于 2005-12-2 17:55:49 | 显示全部楼层
看来冬季HIKKING危险程度挺高的, 大家事前要做好RESERCH.
发表于 2005-12-3 00:14:12 | 显示全部楼层
好贴子!顶!
发表于 2005-12-3 00:58:01 | 显示全部楼层
Grouse Grind也会有雪崩?
发表于 2005-12-4 20:17:00 | 显示全部楼层
飞鱼
Grouse Grind也会有雪崩?


是呀,我觉得有树的地方不应该有雪崩呀。
 楼主| 发表于 2006-2-16 21:11:28 | 显示全部楼层
Accident Reports:

http://alpineclub-edm.org/accidents/accident.asp?id=743



Date: 27 Jan 1999
Location: Grouse Mountain (1211 m) - North Shore, Vancouver

Province: British Columbia

Park or Region: Vancouver

Topo Map: 92 G/6 North Vancouver

Route: Grouse Grind

Type: Hiking

Persons Killed: 1

Persons Injured: 4

Type of Injuries: fatality, undisclosed serious injuries

Description: "A North Vancouver man has emerged as a hero in the wake of last week's tragic avalanche that injured four hikers and is presumed to have killed a fifth. Ken Rutland, 35, was himself hiking the Grouse Grind last Wednesday when the avalanche struck. He was behind the group swept away by the rushing snow but was the first to come upon them. He noticed conditions on the trail deteriorate rapidly at around the three-quarter mark of the trail and would have turned back if he hadn't heard voices up ahead. The voices turned out to belong to two of the avalanche's survivors: M.M. and E.L. Both were pinned against trees by the snow. They were about 60 feet apart. E.L. had a cell phone which he used to call for help and M.M. said his friend, R.M., was unaccounted for. Rutland made his way down the trail to look for R.M., who was described as having red hair. While searching for Manning he heard moaning coming from a nearby gully. As he approached the source of the moaning he saw a man wrapped around a tree with his torso sticking out of the snow at an odd angle. The man, who turned out to be 40-year-old M.S. of North Vancouver was facing the snow and hanging onto some branches. "He was just calling in pain. At that point I just said, 'everything will be OK,'" said Rutland. He also saw a bare "dark and hairy" leg sticking out of the snow near M.S. He knew the leg didn't belong to R.M., a fair-skinned red head. "The leg disappeared into snow under M.S." said Rutland, who began digging the man out. "I remember just touching his neck and feeling a pulse. And then I just undug him and then he popped into consciousness." Rutland asked the man, who turned out to be 32-year-old K.B., if he knew what had happened to him --that he was caught in an avalanche. K.B. didn't, but he did remember being on the Grouse Grind. Both men had suffered serious injuries in the mishap and were unable to move under their own power. Both were also in severe pain. Another avalanche negated Rutland's initial efforts to dig K.B. out. As a result he decided they needed to move from their location. He cut out a nearby landing or shelf in the steep hillside to keep the men safe and had just finished when a second avalanche hit. This one "luckily just spun us into the landing". Yet another avalanche hit the men a short time later. "It kind of felt like we were being swept along by a river," recalled Rutland, who then dug another landing, though a deeper one this time. Several more small avalanches hit them before North Shore Rescue personnel arrived, during which time Rutland did his best to continue to reassure the two injured hikers and try to keep them warm with the extra dry clothing he had in his pack. When the first North Shore Rescue three-man squad arrived, Rutland continued to assist. North Shore Rescue team leader Tim Jones, who was part of the three-man team first to arrive at the scene last Wednesday, had high praise for the BC Transit Security employee. "This was a heroic action because he put himself at risk," said Jones. "For the rest of us this guy's a hero. We don't see ourselves as heroes because we choose to get into this." Jones added that although R.M. is still missing the current operation's focus has shifted from rescue to recovery. For his part, Rutland hasn't decided if he'll be doing the Grouse Grind again, though he's sure he'll wait for the trail to officially reopen first. "If they're doing this much effort to keep people out you'd have to be a fool to go over the barriers (blocking the trail's entrance)," said Rutland." UPDATE: R.M. was two days shy of his 25th birthday when he and four others were swept away by the snow slide early in the afternoon of Jan. 27, 1999. Four of the injured were rescued over a nine-hour period by North Shore Rescue (NSR) volunteers. But R.M.'s body couldn't be found. It was finally recovered May 24 when a dog accompanying an NSR crew found it buried under more than a metre of snow and ice. The trail remained closed until June 18. On Oct. 31 the 2.9-kilometre trail was closed nightly from 4 p.m. to 7 a.m. It was closed until further notice at the beginning of December. The trail won't reopen until sometime this spring. Greater Vancouver Regional District watershed manager Ken Juvik said he has no knowledge of wintertime trail closures on the Grind prior to the tragedy. "It underscored the need to provide public safety on the hill," Juvik said. R.M. who officially died of suffocation, was the subject of a four-month saga that pitted the North Vancouver RCMP, NSR and a private company hired by the victim's father in a war of words. NSR volunteers tried to find R.M. in near-blizzard conditions after the avalanche, but the search was called off because officials felt another avalanche was imminent.
Analysis:

Rescue Mode: another party, North Shore Rescue

Source: Robert Galster, North Shore News

Contributing Cause(s): AVALANCHE
发表于 2006-2-16 22:53:06 | 显示全部楼层
LULU,咱们可得多加小心啊. 有啥措施要做的么?
 楼主| 发表于 2006-2-16 23:37:04 | 显示全部楼层
bigchen
LULU,咱们可得多加小心啊. 有啥措施要做的么?


我们选走的都是没有雪崩危险或危险极低的地段,每次出行前我都会做足准备,包括对了解近期的road/trail condition并时常关注local Avalanche Bulletins :

http://avalanche.ca/default.aspx?DN=5,4,3,Documents

http://avalanche.ca/bulletin/view.aspx?bulletinID=1395

发这些贴子的目的是想和大家一起了解/学习一些雪崩知识,引起对雪崩的重视。
发表于 2006-2-17 01:10:46 | 显示全部楼层
大约在哪儿? GGF范围太大.
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