Backcountry Skiing - First Edition
Backcountry Skiing - First Edition
Backcountry Skiing - First Edition
$21.95 U.S.
n
Intermediate-to-advanced techniques for ski touring and ski mountaineering
n
Skills for mastering uphill travel
n
Primers on mountain weather and avalanche safety
n
Professional advice on selecting gear, troubleshooting, and adapting to varying conditions
n
Information on constructing emergency shelters and sleds
n
Tips for wilderness trip planning and navigation
A native of Switzerland, Martin Volken is one of only three officially certified Swiss Guides working in the
U.S. today. He is also an instructor and examiner for the American Mountain Guides Associations (AMGA)
elite certification, and founder of Pro Guiding Services. Coauthor Scott Schell is a certified AMGA Ski
Mountaineering Guide and has led numerous single- and multi-day trips in the Cascades, British Columbias
Coast Range, and the Alps. Coauthor Margaret Wheeler started guiding for Pro Guiding Service in 2002,
becoming a certified AMGA Ski Mountaineering Guide shortly after. In 2006 she became the second woman
in the U.S. to complete her IFMGA/UIAGM certification.
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ISBN 978-1-59485-038-7
BACKCOUNTRY SKIING
MOUNTAINEERS
series
OUTDOOR EXPERT
MOUNTAINEERS
OUTDOOR EXPERT
s e r i e s
BACKCOUNTRY SKIING
Skills for Ski Touring and
Ski Mountaineering
Martin Volken, Scott Schell,
and Margaret Wheeler
BACKCOUNTRY SKIING
MOUNTAINEERS
OUTDOOR EXPERT
s e r i e s
BACKCOUNTRY SKIING:
Skills for Ski Touring
and Ski Mountaineering
Martin Volken, Scott Schell,
and Margaret Wheeler
Photography by Scott Schell
Contents
Acknowledgments.................................................................................................................... 9
Introduction............................................................................................................................. 11
Chapter 1
Navigation
Uphill Movement
Skinning: The Motion............................................................................................. 140
Skinning: Turns........................................................................................................ 147
Skinning in Difficult Conditions............................................................................. 161
Track Setting........................................................................................................... 167
Chapter 5
Transitions
Chapter 7
Acknowledgments
Creating a book like this is truly an enormous effort, and we owe a gigantic thanks
to all those who have contributed their time
and energy towards this final creation!
Our special thanks for technical and
professional advice, assistance, and information go to: Mike Hattrup, Tom Murphy,
Colin Zacharias, Bruce Edgerly and Steve
Christi (Backcountry Access), Dale Atkins,
Howie Schwarz, all the authors of the
AIARE curriculum, John Hereford, Ken
Schiele (K2 Skis), Lowell Skoog, Freddy
Grossniklaus, Marc Chauvin, Kaj Bune
(Outdoor Research), Martin Poletti (Montana Sport), Chris Solomon, Mason Stafford,
Carolyn Parker, Erik Moen, Chris Miske and
Welling Savo Justin.
We are lucky enough to have friends
and colleagues of great skill and patience
who allowed us to take their pictures for
this project. We look forward to going skiing
with you all in the future for fun, not just to
take technical photos of excruciating detail:
Mason Stafford, Ben Haskell, Chris Miske,
Adam Justin (Pro Ski Service Seattle),
Dave Jordan, Chris Solomon, Ben Wheeler,
Howie Schwarz, Kasha Rigby, John and
Erin Spiess, and Sarah Bruce. Thank you
also to all the participants in the AMGA ski
programs during which Scott was shooting
CHAPTER HEADER
10
Introduction
with skis strapped on his or her back, wearing a harness, and using a rope to rappel
into a couloir of steep, untracked snow.
This mental slideshow is a testimony to
the diversity of ski touring and ski mountaineering. The two sports are inherently
connected; in order to achieve complicated ski mountaineering objectives you
must first master the basics of ski touring.
Wouldnt it seem dangerous to attempt the
Haute Route in the Alps or the Forbidden
Tour in the North Cascades if you had never
been ski touring before? Ski mountaineering is a blend of multiple disciplines involving everything from snow safety to alpine
rope skills to winter camping. It requires a
depth of knowledge, skill, and experience
that goes beyond what you must know in
order to ski laps in the woods or the back
bowls of your favorite ski area. Ski touring
is the foundation upon which ski mountaineering is built.
introduction
what is and is
not in This Book
This book arose out of a desire to keep pace
with the recent evolution of the skiing population, the improvement and proliferation
of gear, and the development of new techniques. Our aim is to provide an in-depth
explanation of all of the various skills,
knowledge, and techniques that are so
crucial to safety and success in the
diverse activities of ski touring and ski
12
13
introduction
Tools or Playthings?
Arnold Lunn wrote in the early 1900s, Ski mountaineering is the result of the marriage of
two great sports, mountaineering and skiing. But is it mostly mountaineering, or mostly
skiing? Are skis tools to achieve some end, or is skiing itself the end? The ski mountaineer
crossing a glacier on a high-level traverse and the extreme skier linking turns on a mustnot-fall descent have answered these questions very differently.
Marcel Kurz, who pioneered the Chamonix-to-Zermatt Haute Route in 1911, wrote, In
the high mountains the ski ceases to be a plaything. Circumstances make it a toolthe
most useful aid to the winter mountaineerbut a simple tool intended to make traveling
easiersomething which we put on or take off like crampons and which is only a means to
an end. Kurzs viewpoint was typical of the early 1900s. The pioneers of ski mountaineering used skis for winter ascents and high-level traverses. They wanted to go places in the
mountains, and skis were tools for the job.
The pioneering era of ski mountaineering ended around the time of World War II, when
mechanical lifts became common in Europe and North America. Skis, for the vast majority
of skiers who rode lifts, were simply playthings. Just a tiny minority of skiers continued to
do mountaineering. For three decades, they were largely content to repeat the accomplishments of the prewar pioneers.
Arnold Lunn, the Englishman who did so much to promote ski mountaineering before
the war, invented modern slalom racing in the 1920s. He did it, he later wrote, inspired by
the naive concern that downhill racing would help to develop the kind of technique suitable for ski mountaineering. (Slalom was supposed to simulate tree-running during the
descent from a peak.) By the 1960s, Lunn lamented that ski racers had become a bunch
of ballet dancers on skis and that the sport was infected by downhill-only disease. He
recalled, In the remote past, skis were the passport to untracked snow and unexplored
slopes. That was no longer true, it seemed.
Ironically, slalom racing and other developments from lift skiing began to profoundly
influence ski mountaineering soon after Lunns death in 1974. In North America, former
lift skiers fleeing the crowds and constraints of ski resorts rediscovered Nordic touring and
the telemark turn. Although it was not as suitable for downhill skiing as the alpine gear of
the day, lightweight Nordic gear was much more mobile and it became the preferred tool
for North American skiers to leave the beaten path. Telemark skiers sparked a renaissance
in backcountry skiing in the 1970s and 1980s, pioneering high-level ski routes in North
Americas wilderness mountains similar to those done earlier in the more civilized Alps. They
had rediscovered the ski as a tool for mountaineering.
In Europe, a small number of ski instructors and mountain guides began using alpine skis
to descend steep climbing routes where a fall would likely spell death. Such feats would not
have been possible without the advances in equipment and technique driven by ski racing.
14
By the late 1970s, competition for first ski descents in the French Alps grew so intense that
ethical disputes arose over the use of helicopters for the ascent and rappels for the descent.
Skis, for these mountaineers, were a far cry from Marcel Kurzs tools to make traveling
easier. They were playthings, employed in an elaborate and deadly serious game.
Since the 1990s, Nordic and alpine touring have converged. Nordic equipment has become
more downhill-capable and alpine equipment has become more touring-friendly. The new
balance is illustrated by randonne racing, a European invention that has recently taken
hold in North America. Racing up, down, and across the mountains, this sport is something
that Arnold Lunn would certainly have recognized. Randonne racing is likely to spawn new
developments that will make it easier for tomorrows ski mountaineers to return to the roots
of the sportexploring the mountains.
Lowell Skoog has been a ski mountaineering pioneer in the
Pacific Northwest for decades and has done much work
in compiling its history of ski mountaineering.
telemark vs.
alpine Touring
Free the heel and the mind will follow.
Fix the heel and fix the problem.
15
introduction
16
17
Chapter 1
20
21
Skis
Choosing skis used to be a rather simple
affair. There was not a great selection, and
innovation for backcountry skis was slow
because of the economics of ski building.
For a long time telemark skis looked like
fat versions of cross-country skis (which are
called backcountry skis these days...very
confusing). Let us explain: backcountry
skiers use telemark or alpine touring (AT)
skis, both called touring skis. Cross-country
skiers use track (classic) skis, cross-country
skis, skating skis, and backcountry skis.
From the early 1970s to the late 80s, AT
skis had a generic side-cut geometry (90
millimeters at the tip, 70 at the waist, 80 at
the tail), a tip that was turned up farther
than an alpine (downhill) ski, and a very
bright top-sheet color for some added avalanche safety.
Things seemed a little stuck until shaped
skis came along. Manufacturers started experimenting with side cuts, and by the late90s any traditional idea of what a telemark
or AT ski should look like was thrown out.
Telemark and AT skis started to look a
lot alike, then they started sharing molds,
and these days the only difference lies in
the construction of the ski and how the ski
is designed to flex (fig. 1.2 shows modern
AT and tele skis). A telemark turn applies
22
skis
Tip:
119 mm
Tip:
122 mm
Waist:
78 mm
Waist:
80 mm
Tail:
105 mm
Tail:
107 mm
23
24
skis
Weight
Since most backcountry skiers earn their
turns, we spend an amazing amount of time
talking about the weight of skis, and light
skis remain popular. With good engineering and a lot of care a ski can be built quite
light and still perform very well.
But at some point in the weight-loss
program, the downhill performance of a ski
decreases dramatically. According to K2s
ski builder guru, Ken Shiele, engineering
properties alone cant make up for certain
benefits that mass brings to a ski.
To ensure decent ski performance in
terms of edge hold, steering power, and
general performance at speed, be suspicious of a ski that weighs less than about
1500 grams per ski. A lighter ski can perform well, but it needs to be very carefully
built; the construction materials will most
likely be quite exotic and the resulting price
will reflect that.
In a ski, a certain amount of mass results
in inertia, better edge hold, better steering,
and generally more stable behavior. On
the other side of the scale, if a ski gets too
heavy it becomes unresponsive; a World
Cup downhill ski will not be a snappy ski.
Telemark and AT skis currently range
from a featherlight 800 grams per ski to
nearly 2000 grams (fig. 1.3). At around 1800
Ski Length
It used to be popular to choose a shorter
ski for ski touring than for downhill skiing.
This was a simple way to lighten your setup
and make it more maneuverable.
But this came at the expense of general
ski performance and fore and aft stability. If youre skiing in difficult snow, with
a backpack and softer boots, a lighter ski
(thats harder to control) can make your
first downhill experience with your new AT
or telemark outfit quite an awakening.
For some of the considerations mentioned above, in-area and backcountry
ski length selection have melted together.
Some people even prefer a slightly longer
AT or telemark ski in order to increase fore
and aft stability.
Intended Application
Because of the diversity of intended applications, there is not one best ski for ski
touring. To make the right choice, it helps
to be as clear as possible about what kind of
touring you are going to do.
Are you strictly weight conscious and
willing to forego a certain amount of ski
performance?
Are you accessing the goods or that
difficult descent and willing to carry the
25
Tip:
124 mm
Tip:
86 mm
Waist:
88 mm
Waist:
65 mm
Tail:
111 mm
Tail:
74 mm
800 grams
1850 grams
Fig. 1.3 The far ends of the spectrum of topnotch backcountry skis
26
skis
27
Better to give up a bit of precision and hard-snow stability and gain predictability and
forgiveness in your touring ski. Thats not to say the ski shouldnt be high performance; you
still need solid edge hold and stability. But shallow to moderate side cut, moderate to stiff
torsion, medium-round flex, and a less reactive tip profile can provide that forgiveness and
predictability.
Not only are you more likely to encounter tough conditions when touring, but the
consequences are more severe. At best, multiple crashes sap valuable energy reserves. At
worst, if you crash in the wrong placelike the top of a steep slope or above rocks, cliffs,
or crevassesthe consequences can be fatal. If you twist a knee because your ski was erratic and hooky, backcountry evacuation is much more daunting than simply waiting for the
patrol to bring you to the first-aid shack in a big, solid toboggan.
Which brings us to the next function of a touring ski: utility. If you want to cut down on
weight in the backcountry, the multifunctionality of all your equipment is crucial. If you can
construct a sled with your skis, you dont need to carry a rescue sled. If you can use your skis
as a belay anchor or to stake out your tent, pickets and tent stakes can be left at home.
With that in mind, look for skis that have holes drilled in the tips and tails to facilitate
rescue sled construction, tail notches to secure skin hooks, bright colors for visibility, and,
one of the most overlooked designs, straight tails. Twin-tipped tails are great for going backward or throwing up a smokescreen of powder, but they prevent you from jamming your
tails in even the softest snownot a big deal until you try to build an anchor by jamming
your tails in the snow. Even trivial tasks like securing your skis on a steep, firm slope while
taking off your pack or putting on your crampons become challenging, if not impossible,
with twin tips.
So when picking out a touring ski, realize that most alpine skis dont have the utility features you need for an efficient backcountry tool; they are designed for different conditions
than youre likely to find in the backcountry. Choose your touring ski wiselynot only does
your skiing enjoyment depend on it, your safety does as well.
Mike Hattrup is the director of development for the K2 telemark
and AT divisions, is an AMGA-certified ski mountaineering
guide, and has appeared in several ski movies.
Boots
The most dreaded ski gear purchase is often the ski boot. Many skiers endured their
first turns in toenail-crushing torture chambers foisted upon them by race-fit-obsessed
28
boots
plays a crucial role in the overall performance of your backcountry setup. Boots
for the backcountry must fulfill a dual
purpose: uphill function and downhill
performance. We all want to carve turns
in breakable crust with the power of an
alpine boot, even as we demand efficiency
while skinning uphill.
To that end, all telemark and AT boots
have a walk/ski switch in the back. When
in the walk position, this switch allows the
rear of the boot to flex backward, increasing comfort and stride length on the uphill.
Ski mode locks the upper cuff of the boot in
position, giving the skier better control for
the ski down.
Moldable Liners
Both telemark and AT boots are available
with heat-moldable liners (fig. 1.5). These
liners, made of moldable ethylene vinyl acetate (EVA) foam, contour nicely to your foot
and provide an excellent fit. For best results,
have your liners molded in a qualified shop
with a special oven and a skilled fitter. These
moldable liners have several advantages over
Boot Fit:
Shell and Liner Size
We all know the saying: if the shoe fits,
wear it. The overall fit of a boot will most
likely be the biggest determining factor in
your final boot choice.
First, accurately determine the size of
your foot by having the salesperson measure it. Then, to fit the plastic shell, remove
the liner and place your foot in the empty
shell. Slide your foot forward and let your
toes touch firmly against the front of the
boot. With your fingers, see how much
space you have between your heel and
the back of the boot: you want around 0.75
inch. For backcountry racing performance,
round down in size; if youre heading to the
Arctic and need a little more warmth, err
on the bigger side. Once you have figured
out your shell size, reinsert the liner into
the shell and try it on.
First make sure that the length of the
shell is still good with the liner inserted.
When you stand straight up and lean back
a little, the tips of your toes should lightly
touch the end of the boot. Touching the
liner with your toes when the boot is new
is not a bad thing. When new, the boot
is the smallest it will ever be, and if your
toes touch lightly this gives you the right
amount of thickness to keep the boot snug
after the liner packs out. If youre in a
boot with a moldable liner, expect to feel
pressure around your toes. Once correctly
29
Womens Boots
For many years, women had to use the only
boots available to them: mens boots. But
womens versions of most models are now
in shops and generally have the following
differences: smaller sizes available, wider
and lower upper cuff, narrower heel, and
narrower forefoot.
Telemark Boots
Modern telemark boots have come a long
way, and most backcountry telemark skiers
now use plastic boots (fig. 1.6). These modern plastic boots consist of shells that have
multiple plastics injected into them, which
allows the manufacturer to control and
vary the flex of the boot. Depending on the
intended purpose of the boot, the flex may
be stiffer in one area and softer in another.
As a general rule, boots having a higher cuff
and more buckles often lend themselves
to better downhill performance. Be sure to
consider your backcountry objectives when
perusing the boot wall.
Fig. 1.6 Modern plastic telemark boots offer a range of performance capabilities.
30
boots
When trying on different models, the fitting discussion above applies, with one additional consideration: the fit and flex of the
bellows. The ideal fit will allow you to flex
forward onto the ball of your foot without
any pinching.
Tip: Ask the salesperson to provide you with
a tele ski and binding to place on the floor
to better determine to flex and position of
the bellows. Another thing to consider when
fitting a tele boot is the addition of an insole.
Unlike in an AT boot, the insole in a telemark
boot must remain flexible so as not to crack
when the boot flexes.
31
order to create a strong skiing boot, manufacturers increase the overall stiffness (in
all directions) in an alpine boot, which
often means a thicker plastic shell made of
different material and thus more weight.
The bottom line for alpine boots? They work
great going down, but going up the mountain
theyll be inefficient and uncomfortable.
Bindings
Bindings are often the last and least deliberated piece of gear in the ski-boot-binding
package. By the time most people waddle
(in their new boots) from the ski wall over
to the binding side of the store, they are
worn out from the complicated decisions
about boot flex and ski design. But telemark
and AT bindings play a large role in the
32
bindings
Telemark Bindings
Most telemark bindings adhere to the 75millimeter Nordic norm. This requires the
classic duckbill toe that weve all come to
recognize. This norm has been standard for
decades, although it is undergoing change
with the advent of the new telemark norm
(NTN; see Telemark Boots, above). Over the
years, bindings have been developed using
various designs: the classic 3-pin style, cable
bindings, andmost recentlybindings designed with a low-resistance pivot point.
Before you head to the ski shop to purchase bindings, ask yourself these questions:
How much time will you spend in the
backcountry vs. in-area skiing?
How much weight are you willing
to carry?
What is more important: downhill
performance or weight?
Are you interested in a release
mechanism?
Classic 3-Pin
These bindings were once the standard for
the telemark skier, but they have fallen
by the wayside with the advent of the
modern cable binding (see below). This
is most likely because the classic threepin lacks torsional stability and control
over the ski, especially when paired with
a high-performance plastic tele boot.
Another issue with these bindings is the
pinhole wear in the boot sole associated
with the pins.
The classic three-pin binding works well
for the skier looking to do very light-duty
touring; beyond that, cables should be part
of your binding.
Cables
Cable bindings have become the standard telemark bindings for both in-area
and backcountry skiing (see fig. 1.9). The
cables affect both uphill and downhill
performance: depending on your skinningto-skiing ratio, they can be beneficial for
control...or they can hinder your ability to
tour efficiently.
On the downhill, cables serve several
functions. They provide a significant increase in torsional stability, which allows
better control of the ski in aggressive terrain or difficult skiing conditions. Second,
cables are the primary attachment mechanism between the boot and the binding,
a great improvement over the three-pin
attachment on its own. Cables solve the
problem of pinhole wear in the boot sole
and also take care of lining up the boot sole
and the binding.
33
Fig. 1.9 Telemark bindings available on the market offer a wide range of designs.
34
bindings
Lockable mechanism
for downhill
Low-friction
hinge for uphill
35
36
bindings
37
Ski Crampons
Ski crampons, also called harscheisen (the
German term), are a very important tool for
the backcountry skier. These metal devices
attach to ski bindings and augment traction
provided by climbing skins. In softer snow,
skins themselves provide plenty of traction. But when the conditions become too
firm, as in the early mornings of a spring
tour, attaching ski crampons can save you
a tremendous amount of energy and can
increase your margin of safety.
Fig. 1.13 Ski crampons for Dynafit, Naxo, and Fritschi bindings
38
skins
War and the postwar revitalization programs in Austria and Germany led to the
first gondolas which, along with ski lifts,
changed the face of skiing forever.
But before lift-assisted skiing, the masses
earned their turns by attaching skins to
their skis for traction. As the name implies,
mammal skins were most often used. Some
skiers even used fir twigs strapped under
their skis, certainly a cheaper option than
animal skins.
The plush, as the climbing skin surface
is called, has to fulfill two contradictory
purposes. Ideally it should provide next to
no gliding resistance when youre striding
forward, and then it needs to provide as
much traction as possible when you step
down on your ski.
Seal skin was a popular material because
it fulfilled this dual function. The hair
grows at a very narrow angle out of the
actual skin of a seal, which makes both the
gliding and catching actions possible. Mohair, the material used after seal skins fell
out of favor, has similar qualities.
Contemporary climbing skins consist of
three parts: the plush, the backing, and the
attachment system.
The Plush
Skins
By most accounts, skis and skins have been
used together for several thousand years. In
fact, for the longest time skiing was called
skilaufen (ski walking) in German-speaking
countries. The term skifahren (ski riding)
was not born until the 1920s and 30s. Technological advances during the First World
39
The Backing
The backing is what the plush adheres to
on one side and the adhesive adheres to on
the other.
40
skins
Some Skin
Recommendations
Choose skins with a reliable adhesive. If
41
CHAPTER HEADER
Fig. 1.15
42
S1 HEADER
Fig. 1.18
Fig. 1.17
Fig. 1.19
43
CHAPTER HEADER
Fig. 1.20
Fig. 1.21
44
S1 HEADER
Length reference
mark from step 8
Fig. 1.22
9. Using your length reference mark from step 8, measure 1520 centimeters longer on the
skin and cut the excess skin material at that point (fig. 1.22).
Length
reference
mark from
step 8
Step 10
Fig. 1.23
45
Fig. 1.25
CHAPTER HEADER
Length
reference
mark from
step 8
Length reference
mark from step 8
Scrap from step
11 as template
Fig. 1.24
Fig. 1.26
Length reference
mark from step 8
46
S1 HEADER
Fig. 1.27
Ski
Skin
Fig. 1.28
Poles
Ski poles come in a variety of types. The
set of downhill poles you use in the ski
area will, for the most part, work fine for
the backcountry.
If you plan on doing a lot of touring, it is
worth investing in the telescopic or adjustable type. Adjustable poles allow you to dial
in the length you prefer for the conditions.
For example, your tour may culminate on a
47
Sizing Poles
We tend to size poles for backcountry skiing
the same as for downhill skiing. First, turn
the pole upside down. Next, place your
hand under the basket. Now align your
upper arm with your torso and look for a
90-degree bend in your elbow. This is less
of an issue with adjustable polesyou can
change their length to fit your needs and
most are one size fits all.
Tip: If you plan on using your downhill poles,
consider purchasing a larger basket for the
backcountry.
Pole Attachments
For sportier ski descents, consider an ice ax
attachment, which puts an ice ax pick on
the handle of your ski pole. We recommend
the type that can easily be removed when
the terrain is not so steep. This should help
minimize the chance of impaling yourself
when trying to enjoy powder.
Boot Crampons
Boot crampons are an important piece of
gear for the ski mountaineer. They can
provide added security when conditions are
frozen or icy, and they greatly expand your
ability to move through technical terrain.
Choosing boot crampons is like choosing any other piece of technical gear: your
goal is to select the right tool for your
intended application. You should consider
weight, material, number and configuration
of points, flexibility, and the attachment
system. Of these, weight is often the most
important in the ski arena, and its related
to many of the other factors.
Why not simply choose the lightest?
Consider that crampons are an essential
piece of safety gear. Climbing in steep,
technical terrain using the wrong crampons is a recipe for an accident. Many ski
mountaineers have a quiver of crampons
similar to their quiver of skis. Objectives
with technical summits involving rock may
not be suitable for lightweight aluminum
crampons. But on a ski tour with only short
sections of steep snow you may wish to
take advantage of the reduced weight that
aluminum crampons provide.
The materials comparison below outlines the key features to consider when
choosing crampons for ski mountaineering:
Steel
Pros
Cons
Aluminum
Pros
Cons
Lightweight
Doesn't penetrate ice well
Can break or bend easily
Wears down easily
48
boot crampons
Ultralight
aluminum
crampon
Aggressive
steel crampon
Fig. 1.29 Two types of boot crampons suitable for ski mountaineering
Number and
Configuration of Points
Classic 12-point. Crampons with 12 points
have long been standard for technical
climbing. The more points the better the
purchase power. In fact, there are iceclimbing crampons with more than 12
points. The downsides of more points are
increased weight and more difficult walking
in mellow terrain.
10 points or less. Crampons with 10
points are popular for ski touring because
they are lighter and are easier to walk in.
Configuration. The overall length of
the points and their angle create different
levels of performance. The longer the front
Ridged or Hinged
Ridged crampons are simply those that
dont bend in the instep. These are more
suited to steep ice then to general ski
mountaineering and are not very common
these days.
Most crampons are hinged. The toe- and
the heelpieces are separate and joined by a
bar or rail. Hinged crampons will fit a variety of boots and boot-sole stiffnesses.
49
Attachment System
Having a crampon come off in walking terrain is a big inconvenience; having it come
off while climbing is downright dangerous.
The attachment system needs to provide a
secure fit between the boot and the crampon. Some attachment systems work better
than others depending on the model of
boot, and how crampons attach also affects
how easy they are to put on, which correlates to transition time (figs. 1.30 and 1.31).
Tip: If youre using a classic tele boot, make
sure the crampon toe bail fits over the lip of
the toe and allows for adequate front-point
purchase. Also make sure the crampons will
work on a flexible sole.
Clip heel
Basic (universal)
strap system
Universal toe
Fig. 1.30 Boot crampons showing different attachment systems
50
ice axes
Accessories
Antiballing plates. These plates, made
of rubber or plastic, snap on underneath
crampons and help minimize snow buildup
under crampons, a dangerous problem. The
plates sometimes come with the crampons
or otherwise must be added on. They are a
worthwhile add-on purchase.
Crampon pouch. Whenever possible,
its best to keep all of your equipment in
your pack. A good pouch keeps the sharp
points of your crampons from coming in
contact with your pack contents. Look for a
Ice Axes
Ski mountaineering objectives warrant the
use of an ice ax. An ice ax provides security
on steep slopes, a means of climbing technical terrain, and a tool for self-arrest in the
event of a slip. An ice ax can also be used to
create ski platforms (discussed in chapter 5,
Transitions) and anchors commonly used in
ski mountaineering (see Anchors on Snow
in chapter 6). Choosing an ice ax is similar
to choosing crampons: try to balance function and weight (fig. 1.32).
Length
For ski mountaineering, we recommend an
ice ax length of between 50 and 65 centimeters, depending on your height. Longer axes
are better suited for mellow terrain. A long
ax (nearly touching the ground while standing on level ground) is not suited to steep
terrain, which is where the ice ax is truly
needed for ski objectives.
Furthermore, building ski platforms or
ski anchors requires a fair amount of swing
and chopping, something a long ax does not
do well. Finally, longer axes extend above
your pack, potentially snagging trees and
other objects while skiing.
Weight
Think lighter for ski mountaineering. That
said, we dont recommend aluminum heads
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Fig. 1.32 Ice axes and ice tools ranging from a longer walking ax to an aggressive ice tool
Shaft
A straight shaft is the most common because it plunges into the snow for added
security while climbing steep snow. This
contrasts with the fully curved shaft of an
ice tool, designed for swinging overhead
into the ice. Some ice axes have a straight
shaft with a bit of a curve near the head,
providing a little extra power and clearance
Harnesses
A ski mountaineering harness differs from
a climbing harness in several ways, and the
harness you select should reflect those differences. The ideal ski harness is a minimal
affair; consider the following in selecting
your harness.
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clothing
Weight and padding. Seek a light harness with minimal padding. Padding makes
your harness more comfortable to hang in,
but it adds bulk and can act like a sponge
when it gets wet. The amount of time spent
hanging in your harness will hopefully be
minimal in ski mountaineering. You may
wear a harness for glacier travel or for
roped travel on rock or ice, but neither of
these applications calls for hanging in your
harness unless in the event of a falland
the likelihood of a fall should be much
smaller than in a vertical rock or ice climbing arena.
Easy on and off. A ski harness should
be configured so you can take it on and off
without having to take your skis (or crampons) off. There are several designs out
there, but any harness with buckles in the
right places will do the trick.
Gear loops. These are very handy for
ski mountaineering, but seek gear loops
that are light and pack down smallthey
dont need to be the rigid gear loops of a
climbing harness.
Belay loop. Some lightweight harnesses
have them, and some dont. Belay loops can
help keep you moving quickly in transitionheavy and technical terrain.
Using the facilities. A harness with
buckles on the bum straps will enable you to
take care of business without taking off your
harness. This is very handy for glacier travel,
especially if you cant pee standing up!
Clothing
Proper clothing while ski touring and ski
mountaineering can make an enormous
difference in how much you enjoy yourself
and even in how safe you are. Of course, we
all want to look good, but your clothing has
to be functional, and the selection of clothing available has never been better.
With the right clothing and movement
rate, its not that hard to stay comfortable.
Most of the problems encountered by the
backcountry skier originate with one of the
following issues.
Waterproofness
vs. Breathability
Lets get technical. In the late 1970s the
Gore Company introduced a revolutionary
principle: a PTFE (polytetrafluoroethylene)
layer was manufactured such that pores
were so small (9 million pores per square
inch!) that only vapor molecules could pass
through themwater molecules were too
big. This resulted in a truly waterproof and
breathable membrane.
Since then, the quest for the best
waterproof and breathable materials has
continued. Gore fabrics have been joined by
competing moisture-management systems
and the use of waterproof coatings on
breathable materials. Each solution has its
compromises and benefits.
Waterproofness. Waterproofness is
measured in a water column test, where
a certain amount of pressure is applied to a
fixed surface area of the membrane. For example, a Gore ProShell membrane is tested
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Membrane
Rain
Outer shell
Moisture in
vapor form
Lining
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clothing
Insulation
No matter how waterproof or breathable
your outer layer, if you stay out in wet
conditions long enough you will get wet. It
is therefore important that your under- and
midlayers are made of fibers that retain
their insulative qualities when wet. When
choosing these layers, consider whether
you anticipate getting cold because of the
temperature alone or because of being
cold and wet. Different fibers and materials work better than others for different
applications.
Synthetic Fibers
Synthetic fibers such as polyester and all
their derivatives are light, durable, and retain
their insulative qualities quite well when
wet. Primaloft, for example, mimics the
insulative qualities of downits not quite as
light, nor as compressible, but it does keep
you warmer than down if it gets wet.
Synthetics also generally dry easily,
an important consideration if you think
you might have to dry a garment while
outdoors. Your body heat may be the only
drying force you have, and while drying
Natural Fibers
Natural Fibers
The most common natural fibers used in
outdoor clothes are down and wool. One of
the greatest insulators relative to its weight
is down. But it loses just about all of its insulation properties when wet, so make sure
that your down stays dry or wear it only in
cold and dry conditions.
Down comes in different fill weights
650 fill, 700 fill, or even 900 fill. This
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clothing
Base Layers
As if the whole concept of layering were
not complicated enough, base layers come
in several thicknesses. Lets try to simplify
things.
If its consistently cold and/or your
activity level is moderate, you might choose
a thicker, or so-called expedition-weight,
base layer. Conversely, if the temperatures
are relatively moderate and/or your activity
level is high, choose a thinner layer.
If youll be wearing the base layer for
many days in a row and drying time is not
an issue, you might try a merino wool productyoull be impressed with its comfort
and stink resistance. If your activity level
is highly aerobic and quick drying time is
crucial, synthetic base layers are still tough
to beat.
Recommendation. Experiment. Everyones metabolism is different and youll
have to find out for yourself what works
for you. A good specialty retailer should be
able to help you along.
Midlayers
Midlayers are generally a bit heavier than
base layers and provide insulation and a
certain amount of weather protection. Midlayers can fulfill a couple of functions: they
can fit neatly under your shell when its
nasty out or they can be the outermost layer in moderate conditions. Some midlayers
are designed to work well either way, and
some are designed to be just a midlayer.
Recommendation. Consider the end
use. If you already have an outer layer,
Outer Layers
The outer layer gets the most attention
even though it spends a good amount of
time in your backpack. Lets face it: when
its nasty out, a lot of people stay home. You
might consider how much time your outer
layer actually spends on your body vs. in
your pack. Also consider whether your
outer layer needs to be mostly waterproof
or if breathability is a big issue. The array of
offerings is staggering.
Design features are also important. For
example, make sure that the hood adjusts
the way you like it and that a helmet can fit
under it.
Recommendation. Have a clear picture
of your intended use. Ask what the claims
of the various manufacturers are based on.
The term waterproof is used quite liberally.
Can a company back it up with technical
data and guarantees? If you are leaning
toward a more breathable garment, can a
company back up its breathability claims?
Gloves
Gloves are a big deal in ski touring. They
need to keep you warm, they need to stay
dry while youre grabbing stuff, they need
to have sticky palms and allow for good
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Socks
Opinions differ here. Some people like liner
socks coupled with a midweight sock, some
like a heavyweight sock for more warmth.
Recommendation. Experiment to find
what works for you. Weve had excellent
luck with wool-synthetic blends. They provide a lot of comfort, dry reasonably easily,
and hold up very well.
Headwear
The surface area of your head is surprisingly big compared to that of your whole body,
which means your head plays a large role
in temperature regulation. A hat can help
keep you warm overall, or it can contribute to you overheating. Try to find a good
middle ground.
One hat can probably not do it all. If you
own a hooded insulated layer, you might
be able to get away with a thinner hat. Also
play with the position of the hat a bit. This
may sound funny, but it actually makes a
difference: maybe wearing no hat would be
too cold, but having the hat on all the way
would make you sweat. Just put it loosely
on top of your head like an old-school Swiss
farmer. You might be surprised.
Recommendation. Take a thin hat and
a loose-fitting medium-size hat instead of
one thick one. This is more versatile for the
same amount of weight and bulk.
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clothing
Warmth is Personal
When youre wearing an insulated garment youre trying to trap heat produced by your
body. Many people mistakenly think that when wearing insulation were attempting to keep
the cold out. While the layer of insulation (fleece, down, Primaloft) does serve to separate
your warm body from the cold air, the
Conduction
Exhaled
most important job of insulation is to
from inside
water vapor
retain heat.
to skin
The shivers we experience at a rest
Radiation
stop are, very simply, due to a lack or
loss of heat that occurs in five different
ways (fig. 1.34). Knowing about them is
Perspiration
Convection
a good start to arming yourself against
the cold:
Conduction: The transfer of heat
Fig. 1.34 Different kinds of heat loss
from a warm object to a cold
one by direct physical contact.
Conductivity varieswater conducts heat about 25 times faster than air.
Convection: The transfer of heat by the movement of a fluid (e.g., air). A good example is heat being carried away by the wind.
Evaporation: When enough heat is added to water on your skin, evaporation occurs.
Water on the skin sucks heat by evaporation and conduction, so staying dry is doubly
important for staying warm.
Respiration: Loss of heat by breathing is a combination of evaporation and convection. With every breath you lose considerable heat if the inhaled air is very cold.
Radiation: The transfer of energy primarily in the form of infrared radiation. Radiative
heat loss is negligible relative to the other forms.
Of these five, conduction, convection, and evaporation are what well-designed clothing can
do something meaningful about. Essentially, we need to protect ourselves from the heatsucking tendencies of cold objects, from cold air movement, and from water (perspiration
and otherwise).
Insulation creates a barrier against heat escaping by trapping air within its structure. Air is
a very efficient insulator as long as its not moving. When air moves it can carry heat with it
(convection). To prevent moving air from disrupting the trapped air in the insulation and to
keep the trapped air dry, a windproof and waterproof layer of fabric should cover it.
But heres where it gets really interesting. Two people wearing exactly the same apparel
can, and often do, have radically different experiences in the cold. There are many reasons for
this, but its implications are profound for the cold-weather enthusiastthere is no accurate
way to rate a garment. To do this, a garment manufacturer would have to know how much
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heat is being kicked out by the wearer. So when deciding what to wear in the cold, each of
us must rely on our understanding of our own bodies. Ask yourself:
Am I a warm person or a cold person?
How fit am I for ski touring?
Am I well rested?
Have I eaten enough?
Am I well hydrated?
Am I at high altitude?
Am I healthy?
In short, understand your body before asking your apparel to keep you warm.
Kaj Bune is a lover of human-powered ski adventure and works as director
of brand development for Outdoor Research in Seattle, Washington.
Day Packs
You should consider three categories when
choosing a day pack: design and construction, fit and comfort, and features.
TOP-LOADING
Pros Easy to pack
Good carrying shape
Top lid gives easy access to
items like sunscreen, food,
electronics, etc.
Cons Must empty entire pack to get
at things in the bottom
No way to separate wet gear
from dry
PANEL
Pros Packing in compartments means
easier access, you don't have
to empty entire pack to get
your down jacket or water
Good carrying shape
Cons No top lid
When very full, small pockets
holding goggles, sunscreen,
etc. can be difficult to access
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day packs
and almost always have a top lid. Paneldesigned packs are set up with multiple
compartments, accessed with zippers into
each compartment. These packs dont usually have a top lid.
Weight vs. durability. This is a balancing act. Lightweight packs tend to be less
durable, and packs constructed with more
durable materials are usually heavier. Skiing can be hard on packs, and the lightweight fabrics can be easily torn by a tree
branch or cut by a sharp ski edge when
youre carrying your skis.
It all comes down to application. If
youre buying a pack for a ski mountaineering race, go light. If you need a pack for allaround ski touring, select one that strikes a
balance between weight and durability. In
doing so, be aware of your pack weight relative to the weights of your shovel, probe,
and other equipment.
Features
Its all too easy to get a pack that is a picture
of gadgetry, with straps and clips plastered
all over it. To choose a pack that has the
functionality that you need and no more,
select between some combination of the
following features.
Dedicated shovel and probe pockets.
How fast can you get your shovel and probe
out of your pack? Having it buried in a
main compartment can make it difficult to
access, with the added problem of getting
your gear wet if you use your shovel and
then repack it. Dedicated pockets for your
shovel blade, shovel handle, and probe are
an important feature to have in a ski pack.
One important note: these pockets
should ideally be closed off completely
with a zipper. Increasing evidence shows
that a simple sheath or clip system for your
shovel blade isnt enough to hold it if youre
caught in an avalanche.
Carrying systems. Ski packs are configured to carry your skis either separately or
apart (fig. 1.35). In choosing which system,
consider ease of use and time it takes to put
your skis on (and take them off) your pack.
Tip: Consider how well the carrying system
will work if the pack is empty or stuffed
overly full.
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Overnight Packs
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ropes
Ropes
Backcountry skiers use rope in a variety of
situations, depending on the terrain and
skill level. Those uses include glacier travel,
rappelling, roped climbing, short roping,
and short pitching.
The primary factor dictating rope choice
is your intended application, a theme we
Rope Types
Rope types are defined based on standards
set forth by the International Mountaineering and Climbing Federation, or Union
Internationale des Associations dAlpinisme
(UIAA). Ropes are rated as single, half, or
twin and are defined by the tests they must
pass and their intended uses.
Single Ropes
Single ropes are designed to be used individually and can be used in every application requiring a rope.
Pros. The single rope does it all. It can
be used on glaciers and for crevasse rescue,
and for technical climbing on rock and ice.
The thicker diameters of these ropes make
them abrasion-resistant and durable.
Cons. Weight. Single ropes are the heaviest way to carry a rope in the mountains.
This is especially true if you need to carry
two ropes for rappelling.
Half Ropes
Half ropes (also called double ropes) are intended to be used in pairs in lead climbing
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Rope Lengths
Once you have determined the rope type
and diameter you need, the next step is
deciding length. Ropes come precut in
lengths between 30 and 70 meters, with
most of them being 60 meters. You want
to bring the shortest rope possible for your
intended useremember, its easy to just
bring a long rope and cover all your bases,
but for skiers weight is crucial. Ask yourself
these questions:
1. What is the longest length you
expect to need? Consider:
Climbing objectives with long
pitches or lowers
Full-length rappels
Venturing into completely
unknown terrain
Glacier travel with more than two
people tied in to one rope
2. Are there any factors present that
allow you to bring a shorter rope?
Consider:
Known objectives with shorter
than 50-meter rappels
Excellent prior knowledge of the
terrain
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ropes
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Dry Treatment
Not all ropes are treated equally. For ski
mountaineering, look for a rope with dry
treatment. Dry treatment is essentially a
waterproof coating on a rope. Dry-treated
ropes still absorb some moisture, but the
difference from a regular rope could save
you several pounds of water weight for a
50-meter rope. Dry treatment usually adds
to the cost of a rope, but it is crucial for use
in any skiing application.
avalanche
safety Equipment
If your tour takes you anywhere near
avalanche terrain you need to have all the
proper safety equipment to effect companion rescue. Think of avalanche safety
Avalanche Transceivers
Avalanche transceivers (also called beacons) have been around for almost forty
years. The first was the Skadi that came out
in 1968, and its not all that different from
the units we use today, though the technology has changed.
Transceivers are portable electronic
devices that both transmit and receive a
radio signal. When transmitting, beacons
work by producing a current and pulsing
it through a coil of wire wrapped around
an antenna or antennae (the first transceivers used a 2.275 kHz frequency, modern ones use 457 kHz). This generates a
magnetic field, which can be visualized
using the concept of flux lines (fig. 1.36).
The shape of a flux line is the path you
take to the buried transceiver. The receiving unit uses its antenna(e) to pick up
the magnetic field and then to generate
a voltage, which is then delivered to the
searchers unit via lights, displays, and
sounds.
Avalanche transceivers are designed to do
one thing and one thing only: to decrease the
burial time of the person caught and buried in
the avalanche. Each person in a group must
wear a transceiver so that he or she can
either be found if buried, or can search in
case another group member is buried.
But nothing, including modern beacon
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Flux lines
Transmitting
beacon
Fig. 1.36 Flux lines representing the shape of the signal of the transmitting beacon; all search beacons
use this signal to find a buried beacon and will follow a path similar to one of those flux lines.
technology, can replace avalanche avoidance when it comes to keeping you alive in
avalanche terrain.
Modern transceivers (fig. 1.37) all use
the 457 kHz frequency and so are all compatible. The mid-1990s saw the rise of digital beacons, which differ from their analog
counterparts by placing a microprocessor
between the antenna(e) and the user interface. The microprocessor allows the beacon
to interpret the data received, giving the
searcher more accurate location and distance readings. The goal of digital beacons
is to reduce the search time for single and
multiple burials. Ortovox, Barryvox, Pieps,
and Arva have joined the original Tracker
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Another option that works well, especially in the spring when youre not wearing a
lot of layers, is to place the transceiver in
one of the front pockets of your pants. The
pocket should be zippered and located in
the front near your groin. Avoid pockets on
your hip and butt, where there is higher potential for trauma to the beacon. The pocket
you choose should be one you can remember
to keep closed during the tour and should be
dedicated to holding only the beacon.
Transceiver Batteries
Transceivers are battery-powered devices. At
present, all transceivers recommend using
standard alkaline batteries. The European
beacon manufacturing standard (there is no
equivalent standard in the United States) says
that a new set of batteries placed in a transceiver needs to be able to transmit at least two
hundred hours and then provide enough
power to perform a search for one hour.
Rechargeable batteries tend to run on
Transceiver Check
There are two main types of checks to
perform: the function check and the range
check. How do you know if your transceiver is working properly? In order to rely
upon the rescue potential an avalanche
transceiver provides, you must check the
function of your beacon every time you ski
in avalanche terrain.
Three-Part Function Check
The three-part function check should be
performed at the beginning of every day at
the trailhead parking lot or the hut youre
staying in. If you discover someones
transceiver is not working correctly here,
its easier to replace the batteries or beacon
before you leave than when you are standing on the side of a run, faced with deciding
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Range Check
The range check ensures that your transceiver has a search and transmit range
equivalent to the manufacturers specs.
Often this check is done at the trailhead
with new ski partners, on the first day of a
tour, or after your transceiver has suffered
a blow (like a drop to the sidewalk). Its a
great way to make sure your transceivers
fragile antenna has not been compromised.
You can integrate this range check into the
function check.
To start, someone will need to take the
lead and have everyone get in a line.
The leader turns her beacon completely off.
The people in the line turn their beacons
to search mode.
The leader walks away approximately
100 meters.
the lineup.
As the leader approaches, each member
Avalanche Probes
Avalanche probes have, for many years,
been the forgotten stepchild of the avalanche safety kit. Backcountry enthusiasts
know they must carry a beacon if they want
to be found and a shovel if they want to dig
someone out. A dedicated avalanche probe
is just as important. In a companion rescue,
the three pieces of safety equipment (beacon, shovel, and probe) function together;
without any one of these, recovery time
goes up dramatically.
Dedicated Probe vs. Ski Poles
Why not simply carry ski poles that turn
into a probe? The answer: time. It can take
upward of a few minutes to turn ski poles
into a probe, whereas a modern dedicated
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Avalanche Shovels
Once you locate your partner with a beacon
and pinpoint him with your probe, you still
need to dig him out. The only effective way
to uncover your partner is with a portable
avalanche shovel (fig. 1.40). Studies show
that the shoveling phase takes the majority
of the time in a recovery (see Shoveling
Technique in chapter 10).
The moment you need to use your
portable shovel in a rescue situation youll
immediately yearn for a full-sized steel
shovel not unlike the garden shovel in your
garage. Keep this in mind when you waiver
between models in the store, and consider
the following.
Fig. 1.40 Modern avalanche shovels note the different handle styles.
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Avalanche
Survival Equipment
The beacon-probe-shovel trinity is the cornerstone of companion rescue equipment,
and research and development continually
seek to improve each items function and
techniques for using them. In addition to
these basics, new technologies are being
developed to help people survive more
avalanches: the Avalung, avalanche airbag
systems, and the Recco system.
Avalung and Avalung Packs
In companion rescue, it takes roughly 20
minutes to find an avalanche victim with
a beacon and dig her out. Survival rates
for those victims not killed by trauma drop
off after 15 minutes, with nearly all deaths
from asphyxiationcarbon dioxide poisoningcoming between 15 and 35 minutes.
The basic goal of the Avalung is to
extend the time a victim can be buried
before asphyxiation occurs. It works by
assisting your breathing. When you inhale,
it functions as an artificial air pocket, with
a breathing apparatus that pulls in air
from the surrounding snowpack, which
is porous. When you exhale, valves in the
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Ski Mountaineering
Threesomes from daylong touring list
Harness, ice ax, crampons
Rope, ice screws, rescue gear kit
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Chapter 2
82
The Anatomy of a
decision: the decisionmaking framework
All travelers in the backcountry use some
way of processing information to help them
make a decision. These decisions can be
everything from gear choice to track angle
to terrain selection. But how are these
decisions made? What is the anatomy of the
decision-making process? Are you including
every important factor involved, or do you
have a pattern that may get you into
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TRAVEL TECHNIQUES
HAZARD
MANAGEMENT
TERRAIN SELECTION
DECISION MAKING
OBSERVATIONS
AVALANCHES
SNOWPACK
WEATHER
ERROR CORRECTION
HUMAN FACTORS
AWARENESS
EXPERIENCE
MOTIVATION
LEADERSHIP, TEAM
SKILLS
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Loose-Snow Avalanches
Loose-snow slides begin as loose, unconsolidated snow that usually starts from a point
and then gathers mass as it moves down the
mountain. Because of their characteristic
teardrop shape they are also called pointrelease avalanches (fig. 2.2).
Loose-snow slides usually begin as very
dry or very wet snow. In either case, the
snow has little or no cohesion. These slides
can range greatly in size, from quite small
(referred to as sloughs) to slides containing
10,000 tons or more of moving snow. Loosesnow slides rarely come close to the size
of the largest slab avalanches. They also
generally have less destructive potential
and fewer people are killed by them. But
dont underestimate loose-snow avalanches
in terrain with higher consequences. If
caught, a backcountry skier is at risk from
injury or worse if swept off a cliff or into a
terrain trap (e.g., a gully or a crevasse).
In general, loose-snow avalanches are
somewhat easier to predict than slab avalanches. Why is this? Remember that loose-
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Fig. 2.2 Several loose-snow avalanches originating from the rocks above the slope
initiation
Usually have a teardrop shape
Happen in conditions that are easier to
Slab Avalanches
Slab avalanches start as a cohesive unit of
snow. When the bonds between the unit of
snow, or slab, and the surrounding snow
fail, you have a slab avalanche.
Once failure occurs, the slab begins to
accelerate down the mountain, breaking
into smaller pieces. Instead of the teardrop
shape seen in the loose-snow avalanches,
the slab has angular walls where the slab
broke loose from the surrounding snow.
The uppermost wall is called the crown or
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Bed surface
Flank
Flank
Stauchwall
Deposition zone
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Size Classification
In North America, two main size classification systems for avalanches are
used: the size relative to path and the
destructive potential. Being able to recognize, communicate, and understand
the size of an avalanche is important to
the backcountry traveler. Later on, well
use size classification as one of many
observations to aid in the decisionmaking process. Both of these systems
can be applied to loose-snow slides and
slab avalanches.
Size Relative to Path
In a nutshell, size relative to path is the
percentage of snow that moved versus what
could have moved in the start zone. This
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The Mountain
Snowpack
In order to understand the formation and
initiation of avalanches, it is necessary to
have a basic understanding of the mountain snowpack. The snowpack is made up
of layers of snow, which are created as
snow falls on the ground throughout the
season. These layersand the connections,
or bonds, between themcan change and
metamorphose over time under the effects
of weather and precipitation. These layers
are the basis for the formation and release
of slab avalanches.
Metamorphism of
the Snowpack
Once the snow is on the ground it immediately begins to changea process called
metamorphism. Metamorphism is neither
good nor bad. It is simply the dynamic process that all snow goes through once it hits
the ground. The weather and the overall
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Snowpack
Creep
Glide
Ground
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Fig. 2.5 Snow grains undergoing the faceting process (Source: AIARE curriculum)
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Fig. 2.6 Snow grains undergoing the rounding process (Source: AIARE curriculum)
Recipe for a
Slab Avalanche
Now that we understand the basics of the
mountain snowpack, lets look at how snow
conditions are related to the potential for
avalanches. Three basic ingredients need to
be present before a slab avalanche can be
triggered:
A cohesive unit of snow (a slab)
A weak layer
Appropriate slope angle
We discuss slope angle in Incline later
this chapter, but first we focus on the first
two ingredients, which are created by the
metamorphism of the mountain snowpack
throughout the season. Lets start simple:
snow falls from the sky and is deposited on
the ground. As the conditions in the atmosphere vary, so does the type and amount
of snow falling, creating a snowpack with
layers.
Weak Layers
A key ingredient in a slab avalanche is a
weak, or failure, layer. This weak layer lies
beneath the slab, providing a surface of
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Buried surface hoar is a pesky and persistent weak layer that can hang around for
months after being covered.
Now the problem: the compressive
strength of buried surface hoar is quite
good, but the shear strength is very poor. If
there is a cohesive slab above it and enough
of a slope angle, all it takes for the layer to
fail is some trigger that adds stress to the
teetering slab and, voil, youve got yourself
a slab avalanche. Overall, buried surface
hoar as a weak layer contributes to a large
portion of slab avalanches, especially skiertriggered ones.
Surface hoar can be persistent when it
is buried in the snowpack, but while on the
surface it is delicate and can be destroyed
by sun, wind, rain, or a warm new stormlayer. The difficultly arises in predicting
the existence of surface hoar over elevation
and aspect. It may rain down low and snow
up high, but it could be windy up high and
calm down low...and so on. The presence
or absence of surface hoar is subject to a
high degree of variability.
Depth hoar. Depth hoar results from
faceting deep within the snowpack. These
grains have a cup-shaped look and can
range in size from barely a millimeter to
several centimeters. The faceting process
to create these grains can take timeoften
days, weeks, or months. These faceted
grains bond poorly to each other and to
other types of grains in the snowpack, and
as such they create a weak layer. Once
depth hoar has formed, it takes a long time
for the rounding process to occur.
Low-density snow. As a weak layer,
Snow Climates
Snow climates describe regions with certain
general characteristics. Knowing the snow
climate can help us further evaluate the
snowpack in a given region. There are three
main snow climates, each with its own
particular characteristics of weather, snowpack, and avalanches (fig. 2.8).
In understanding snow climates, it is
crucial to remember that the characteristics are general rules of thumb. When
considering snow climates, focus on the
results a given snow climate may have on
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Maritime
Continental Intermountain (USA) /
Interior (Canada)
Weather
Precipitation
Wind Transport
Temperature
High rate
Large accumulation
Much pre-storm
Much in-storm
Little post-storm
Warm
Low rate
Small accumulation
Little pre-storm
Some to much in-storm
Much post-storm
Cold
Snowpack
Depth/Distribution Deep, uniform
Shallow, variable
Layering
Uniform
Strong over weak
Rounded
Faceted
Temperature
Warm
Cold
Avalanches
Direct action:
Delayed action:
Many in-storm
events, associated
with significant
storms
Some post-storm
events, usually ending
within 2436 hours
Some in-storm
events, often
associated with
minor storms
Many post-storm
events, days or
even weeks later,
often associated
with little or no
significant weather
Avalanche Danger
Quick to rise
Quick to fall
Slow to rise
Often very slow to fall
Quick to rise
Often slow to fall early season,
quicker to fall late season
Fig. 2.8 Snow climates provide guidelines for weather, snowpack, and avalanche activity.
(Source: AIARE curriculum)
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Terrain Selection:
Understanding
and Identifying
Avalanche Terrain
Choosing your terrain appropriately is
the ultimate goal of backcountry decisionmaking. Theres an old saying among
avalanche professionals: the three most
important things to pay attention to in
backcountry travel are terrain, terrain, and
terrain. With appropriate terrain selection
you can ski on just about any day with just
about any hazard level.
What is avalanche terrain and how do
you identify it? Experienced backcountry
travelers develop a keen eye for the subtleties of the terrain (fig. 2.9) and know where
to travel according to their knowledge of
current snow stability and their riskacceptance level. Sound complicated? It is.
In Metamorphism of the Snowpack we
discussed the active state of the snowpack
Fig. 2.9 The complex terrain of the Ortler range in the Italian Alps
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99
Fig. 2.11 Slopes in the high alpine can contain numerous poorly defined avalanche paths
(Thompson Pass, Alaska).
90
75
60
Frequent
sluffing
45
Incline
30
Most frequent
15
0
Less frequent
100
That said, the optimum angle for an avalanche can vary between the different snow
climates. Weve seen slabs release on slopes
above 50 degrees in maritime climates, and
extreme avalanche cycles can produce avalanches on slopes below 25 degrees.
When considering the incline of a slope,
you must consider the angle of the start
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slope. They work by matching the scale of your map to the scale of the clinometer and then
aligning the correct scale to the contours of the slope in question.
Slope Angle with Ski Poles
A very easy way to measure slope angle is to use your ski poles and take advantage of the
fact that the combined inside angles of any triangle add up to 180 degrees. Here is how
you do it:
First, prepare your poles before leaving home. Measure and mark the shafts of each pole
100 cm from the bottom. Make further marks on one pole (A) so that you end up with marks
at 100 cm, 84 cm, 70 cm, 58 cm, and 47 cm. Label these as 45, 40, 35, 30 , and 25.
In the field, grab pole A at the top of the handle and let it hang plumbso that the pole
tip barely touches the snow.
Hold the other pole (B) horizontally. Slide pole B along its 100 cm marking point down
pole A until the pole tip of pole B touches the uphill side of the snow. Where the marking
point of pole B touches pole A will be the angle of the slope (fig 2.13).
A
100 cm
84 cm
70 cm
58 cm
47 cm
45
B
100 cm
40
35
30
Marking
point
25
B
90
45
A
45
45 slope angle
B
A
90
30
60
30 slope angle
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B
90 25
A
65
25 slope angle
Aspect
Lee
Cross-loaded
Fig. 2.14 Wind loading on lee and cross-loaded
slopes (Source: AIARE curriculum)
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104
Convexities
Concavities
Protruding
Toe of rocks/cliffs
Below cornices
Tour Planning
In describing the Decision-making Framework at the beginning of this chapter, we
emphasized the importance of tour planning as a tool in your decision-making in
the mountains. In this section we focus on
how to generate an effective tour plan and
how to use that tour plan when you are in
the mountains.
Tour planning encompasses a wide
range of activities and considerations, using
a host of resources for snowpack, weather,
avalanche, and terrain information. It is
an extremely powerful tool in managing
the risks and hazards of ski touring and ski
mountaineering. You cant control all of the
hazards youll encounter, but you can better
prepare yourself to deal with those hazards
by trying to predict where, what, and how
they might arise before you find yourself
unintentionally in their midst.
As you are tour planning, you are seeking to answer this question: What do I expect
to see? Your goal is to answer that question
for every leg and every facet of your tour.
What do you expect the snow to be like?
The avalanche hazard? The weather? Your
ski partners? The terrain? Good tour planning will take you through each of these
questions and many more, and will help
you generate a detailed mental picture of
your expectations.
Once you have a complete tour plan,
your goal is to apply it at all times during
your tour. As you move through terrain,
you will constantly be asking these three
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tour planning
107
108
tour planning
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Fig. 2.16 Tour plan for a day of the Haute Route with bearings for whiteout navigation
Time Calculations
How many times have you hiked or skied
out a trail in the dark? How many of those
times was your dark exit intentional? If you
always ski tour in the same place, you may
have a very good idea about how long your
trip will take. But who wants to ski in the
same place all the time? Incorporating time
calculations into your tour planning is a
useful way of dealing with new terrain, new
conditions, new ski partners...and of building intentional margins of safety into your
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tour planning
Fig. 2.17 Haute Route navigation plan created using mapping software
(Tour plan compiled by Marc Chauvin)
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112
tour planning
113
going?
What is the risk acceptance level of each
group member?
What is the fitness of each member? Are
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Human Factors
and Group Dynamics
Backcountry skiing occurs in a high-risk
environment. Every day in the backcountry
requires us to be efficient managers of this
risk. In order to do so, we must first be able
to identify the source and the cause of the
risks we encounter. Our decision-making
process involves identifying risks, quantifying them, evaluating their consequences,
and then acting to mitigate them to an acceptable level for the group.
In this process, we often overlook the
risk we ourselves bring to the tablethe
possibility that our own human behavior
will increase our risk beyond what we are
conscious of. We refer to this internal risk
as human factors. Human factors come not
only from ourselves, but from our interactions and decisions with our fellow skiers.
Understanding human factors, how they
affect our decision-making, and how to
mitigate them is the purpose of this
section.
A review of 1990s avalanche statistics
shows human factors to be the primary
factors in fatal avalanche accidents; terrain, weather, and snowpack conditions
are generally contributing factors. In fact,
human factors are responsible for almost 90
percent of avalanche accidents. This is especially true when it comes to people with
prior avalanche education.
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Human factors are impossible to completely remove from the equationwe are
all human. The key to assessing the human
factor problem is not our ability to observe
the snowpack, weather, and terrain, but our
ability to process this information and to
understand what human factors can affect
our decisions about terrain selection.
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Heuristic Traps in
Avalanche Accidents
The human factors listed above identify behavior patterns that put us at risk. In recent
years, the avalanche community has been
working to understand and quantify these
behaviors and to look scientifically at the
mechanisms the brain uses to make decisions. One of these mechanisms is called
heuristics.
Researcher Ian McCammon says that
a heuristic is a rule of thumb that guides
most of our decisions in everyday life and
while they work most of the time, they
dont always translate to good decisionmaking in avalanche terrain. McCammon
has done significant research on the role
human factors and heuristics play in recreational avalanche accidents (see Heuristic
Traps in Recreational Avalanche Accidents
referenced in the appendix). His findings
show that we are most likely to fall into
what he calls heuristic traps during times
of uncertainty or when faced with the gray
areas of hazard (moderate to considerable)
that recreational backcountry users often
encounter.
According to McCammon, these are the
six most common heuristic traps:
Familiarity. People often feel comfort
with areas they are familiar with, but statements like Ive never seen it avalanche
here before, mean nothing. If there is unstable snow on a slope steep enough to slide
and a trigger, it can avalanche no matter
What to Do about
the Human Factor
Identifying and understanding the role human factors and common heuristics play in
our decisions to select appropriate terrain,
and the common factors and heuristic traps
to look out for, are only the first steps. We
must arm ourselves with the best tools possible to mitigate the chance of falling victim
to an accident of our own making.
Currently, the best tool we have is open
communication, which is central to the
following lists of tools and questions to ask
yourself and your partners. Use these tools
and questions before embarking and while
on your next backcountry trip. And as more
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Fig. 2.19 Routefinding discussion: communication helps mitigate the human factor.
119
Observations and
Awareness for
Backcountry Travel
Imagine for a moment that you need to
describe to a friend all the factors that go
into negotiating your daily commute. Your
description will only provide so much help
for your friend. Many of the decisions he
will have to make during the journey will
be outside the scope of your directions (if
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Observing
Avalanche Activity
What can you observe about avalanche
activity?
When: current, recent, past
Where: area, terrain configuration, terrain traps
What: natural triggers, human trigger,
other triggers
How: destructive potential, propagation,
failure layer
One of the best clues in evaluating stability is the presence of avalanche activity.
As you might expect, observing an avalanche on a slope is an indicator of the poor
stability of that slope. What about the slope
across the valley, or those with similar aspects and elevations? As you move through
the mountains, constantly look for the signs
of previous and current avalanche activity. The more recent the activity is and the
more closely the slope matches the one
youre on, the more relevant the information becomes.
Interpreting Your
Observations
The final question is how you interpret
your observations. Think of quantifying
your observations as critical to snow stability or not. Red flag values are observations
that meet or exceed critical parameters in
each observation. Red flags indicate that
avalanche danger may be increasing. The
greater the number of red flags you observe,
the greater the potential avalanche hazard
may be. Make sure to connect your observations of red flags with your tour-planning
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Bonding:
Strength: test results from CTV (Compression Test Very Easy, fractures during the cutting
of the column), CTE (Compression Test Easy, fractures with between 010 taps), or CTM
(Compression Test Moderate, fractures with between 1020 taps); Rutschblock less than
or equal to 4
Plane characteristics: smooth, clean shears at failure
Failure layer: large, loosely packed, angular grains
Whumphing:
Initiation: natural or human trigger
Propagation: far, greater than 10 feet
Extent: widespread
Avalanche Activity
When:
Current: observed or occurred in last 12 hours
Recent: 1236 hours maritime climate, 1248 hours continental climate
Past: greater than 36/48 hours, do conditions still exist?
Where:
Area: widespread
Terrain configuration: terrain similar to where you travel
Terrain traps: traps exist where avalanches are running
What:
Natural triggers: any natural triggers are observed
Human trigger: any human triggers are observed
Other triggers: remote triggers are observed
How:
Destructive potential: greater or equal to a D2
Propagation: wide fracture lines that run far
Failure layer: failing on weak layers
(Source: AIARE curriculum)
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Many of the most experienced decisionmakers will allow for a margin of error,
with margins being greater when uncertainty is higher. Those with lesser
training and experience should always
err on the side of caution when learning
Twenty-five degrees and still scary in a touchy snowpack in the Canadian Rockies
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Decision-making Applied
How can you keep track of all the information and observations that make up your
decision-making process? How can you apply the decision-making process in any region, be
it your home mountains or on a trip? Below is a series of questions designed to assist the
backcountry traveler in decision-making, organized into the acronym STOP, which stands
for: Snowpack and Weather, Terrain, Options, People.
Use this acronym in three ways: as part of your pretrip decision-making, at the trailhead,
and throughout the tour.
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If you do a field pit, do your results confirm your expectations? Are there strong
layers over weak layers? Do you find them widespread in the terrain, or only in
specific locations?
Is there a significant amount of new snow or precipitation? Is wind transport
occurring?
How good is the visibility and how strong is the solar radiation?
Are the temperatures warming or cooling?
Terrain: What is the nature and extent of avalanche terrain?
Are you making observations in areas of terrain similar to those you want to ski?
Does your route take you into potential start zones or runout zones?
Could this terrain initiate an avalanche in the current conditions?
Can you select terrain to protect yourselves from the avalanche hazard?
Options: What options do you have to mitigate the hazard at this point?
What alternatives do you have for your route through this hazard?
Can you use travel techniques to mitigate the hazard? Would spreading out be
effective?
Are you on your time plan?
People: How are people functioning as a group?
Is the group keen on making observations, or do they just want to ski it?
What is the groups experience level in making and interpreting observations about
the snowpack?
Is communication working among the group? Does everyone know what the plan is?
Is the group aware of potential human factors/heuristic traps at work?
Is everyone eating/drinking/warm enough? Is anyone getting tired or falling behind?
(Source: Colin Zacharias, UIAGM guide, CAA and AIARE avalanche instructor and examiner
for the ACMG)
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Chapter 3
Navigation
Navigation is important for ski touring and
ski mountaineering. Travel on skis takes
place on snow, which means you arent
likely to be following a trail all the time.
Your tours may also lead you to the high
alpine or glaciated terrain, both of which
can magnify the difficulties of moving in
poor or nonexistent visibility. The value of
doing your own navigation on skis is even
greater than in other disciplines, like hiking
or mountaineering: if youre always following someone elses tracks, how will you
ever find the untouched powder stashes
you seek?
This chapter focuses on those elements
of navigation that are most useful for ski
touring and ski mountaineering. For more
in-depth treatment of navigation, see the
resources in the appendix.
Navigation Tools
The tools used for navigation are map,
compass, altimeter, and Global Positioning System (GPS) unit (fig. 3.1). Of all four
tools, the GPS unit is the most likely to run
out of battery power. For that reason, we
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navigation tools
133
navigation
Navigation Techniques
Once you have the basic knowledge of
how to read maps and use a compass, you
can begin to apply your navigation in the
field, bringing all tools to the mixmap,
compass, altimeter, and GPS. In every case,
navigation with map-compass-altimeter requires that you start navigating before youre
lost. If you dont know where you are, you
have no reference point to use for navigation. This is one of the main strengths of
the GPS unit: you can get completely lost
and turn it on, and instantly youll have
your location as a reference point.
Whiteout Navigation
Using Map and Compass
In ski touring and ski mountaineering, you
are often forced to navigate in a full-blown
whiteout above tree line (fig. 3.2). Whiteout
navigation is a skill that requires attention to detail and planning, and planning
beforehand is essential: it is much easier to
plot whiteout navigation before you are in a
whiteout (as discussed in Tour Planning
in chapter 2). Ideally, you will have landmarks, bearings, elevations, and distances
already plotted on your map, ready for use.
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requires patience and good communication between the point person and
compass holder, but with practice you
can settle into steady movement.
If you are on a glacier, you can use this
technique with a rope between the point
person and the navigator.
Handrailing
No matter how good you are, you will deviate somewhat from your bearing given a
long enough distance. To set yourself up for
success, you can incorporate the technique
of handrailing into your tour planning and
whiteout navigation. Handrailing is when
you use large or distinct terrain features in
your whiteout navigation plan as reference
objects. The following are a few ways you
can use handrailing to your advantage:
Stay close to a large featurelike a cliff
or a ridgethat borders a glacier or
snowfield.
When you shoot a bearing across a
wide-open space, aim for a big feature,
then follow that feature to find smaller
features or more difficult spots. For
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navigation
136
navigation techniques
137
Chapter 4
Uphill Movement
140
Body Position
When skinning uphill you should be coming to an upright stance as you weight each
step. Good posturehead up and shoulders
backwill keep you from leaning forward.
Before you take a step, try standing
with your skins on, skis pointing uphill on
a slight incline. Keep your back straight
with your knees slightly bent, and focus on
pressing your weight down through your
heels. Pick a stance that allows you good
The Step
When taking a step with skins on, your ultimate goal is to use as little energy as possible. This is accomplished by using your
frame as much as you do your muscles.
Fig. 4.1 Have a good upright stance with weight in your heels.
Weight
Weight
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uphill movement
Fig. 4.2b Lead with your hip and draw the ski
forward with your boot toe.
142
143
uphill movement
Ankle Position
The Stride
What is the best stride to uselong or
short? There is no absolute rule on this.
You will find that strides varyperson to
144
Heel Lifters
Fig. 4.5 Use your knees and ankles to roll your
skis slightly downhill. This brings more of the
skin in contact with the snow.
145
Fig. 4.6 Good upper body technique when skinning. Notice hand position on uphill pole.
146
skinning: turns
Skinning: Turns
Have you ever watched someone on skins
work their way up a zigzag skin track, struggling through each kick turn? Perhaps you
have experienced this yourself: wobbling
precariously on one foot, with the other
foot partway around and the tip or tail stuck
in the snow, wondering which knee or hip
is going to give out first.
Turning with skins on, whether in a
gentle curve or a sharp angle, takes more
energy and technique than walking up a
straight track. However, a good turnwell
staged and smoothly executedshould
cause only the slightest blip in the rhythm
of your step or the number on your heartrate monitor.
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uphill movement
and using small As and Vssmaller distances between your ski tips or tailsuses
less energy than larger ones.
The AVA Turn Moving Forward
Now you are ready to execute an efficient
AVA turn while moving forward. With each
A or V step you will move in two directions:
forward and to the side.
1. From a parallel stance, move your
foot forward as per a regular step, but
rotate your leg inward from the hip to
place your ski on the snow to make
the A shape (fig. 4.7).
2. For your second turn step, move your
foot forward and rotate the second ski
so that it completes an V (fig. 4.8).
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skinning: turns
149
uphill movement
Turnaround
points
150
skinning: turns
Fig. 4.11a Kick turn Step 2: Pole positions for the first kick.
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uphill movement
152
Fig. 4.13a Kick turn Step 4A (with springs or low return tele
bindings): Transfer your weight to the uphill ski and lift the
downhill ski several inches off the snow. Important: do not
rotate your ski tip into the snow as you lift it, and make sure
the ski remains parallel to the snow surface.
Ski edge
on boot
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skinning: turns
155
uphill movement
rotate it outward. From that new position, try the kick/flip again.
Solution without binding springs
or with tele pivot binding: Allow
your kicking leg to drop below you, so
your floating ski touches your boot as
close to the tip as possible. It may help
to flex your standing leg slightly. Press
the inside edge of the floating ski against
your boot or binding as you pivot your
leg around.
Variation:
Downhill-Initiated Kick Turn
This variety of kick turn is very useful on
steep terrain or in tight quarters near a
tree or rock. Its also a good alternative for
anyone who has trouble doing the high-kick
part of the basic kick turn or for use with
cable tele bindings with strong return.
1. Set up similar to the basic kick
turn: create a good platform and set
your skis at a low angle. The difference is you will be executing the turn
on the snow below your initial stance.
If you are doing the kick turn on
steep ground, stomp out a platform
and then move slightly above it. Plant
both poles in the slope above you for
stability and balance.
2. Lift your uphill foot a few inches
and set the inside edge of your uphill
ski at ankle height against the inside
of your standing boot (fig. 4.18a).
Keeping boot-edge contact, slide your
floating foot backward, bringing your
ski tip close to your standing boot.
With your floating leg almost straight,
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skinning: turns
(1)
(2)
157
uphill movement
158
skinning: turns
159
uphill movement
160
Skinning in
Difficult Conditions
Skinning uphill is not always characterized
by efficient movement over consistent snow.
The snow surface can be too warm or too
cold, too deep or frozen solid. In these conditions your forward progress can grind to
a slow crawl while your exertion level sky-
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uphill movement
Dealing with
Snow Temperatures
Snow consistency can vary greatly in
temperature depending on season, aspect,
elevation, and region. Whats more, snow
can vary drastically in temperature over
a relatively small area. Each snow conditioncold or warm, or bothcreates its
own set of difficulties.
Cold Smoke
Problem: When snow is very cold and powdery, it can be very slippery to climb.
Solution: Practice so that you are able to
apply perfect skinning technique and body
position. It only takes a nominal amount of
force in the wrong direction to dislodge the
static friction holding your skis to the snow.
Consequently, you must do everything you
can to keep the direction of force you apply
to the skin exactly downward.
As you weight each step, make certain of
the following:
You are weighting your skins through
the heels of your boots.
Your body is hinging upright, with your
hips coming forward.
Neither skin leaves the snow as you
draw it forward with your leg.
You may need to shorten your stride
slightly in order to maintain perfect downward force from your center through your
skins with each step. As you refine your
skinning technique, you will be surprised at
how much difference the slightest shift in
weight and balance can make.
In addition to all this, you can add a
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forward. Once this occurs, the effort required to push forward against all that snow
goes way up.
Solution: First, wear your wider skis
that day. Second, put your heel lifters in a
high position. Your wide skis will float better, and heel lifters prevent your skis from
diving deep in the snow. With each step,
move your ski forward and flick the tip up
with a kick through your heel, keeping the
ski at an angle relative to the ground and
clearing the snow surface with your ski tip
before each step.
Finally, if the snow becomes so deep
that you cant lift your leg enough to free
your ski tips, its time to stash your poles
on your pack and get out your shovel. With
each step, use the shovel to remove the
snow that has spilled over and is covering
your skis, then kick your ski tip free and
move forward.
Skinning in Frozen
or Uneven Snow
At some point in your ski touring career,
you will encounter a frozen snow surface
that resists your attempts to skin up it (fig.
4.27). Your first and best defense against
slipping in hard conditions is a properly
cut skin for your ski (see the How to Cut
Skins sidebar in chapter 1). However, even
the most flawless skin-cut job will only help
so much without the right skinning technique and ski crampons.
Scribe, Stamp, Roll
Problem: Hard or frozen snow makes it difficult for skins to catch.
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Fig. 4.27 Melt freeze crusts provide challenging skinning and often call for the use of good
technique and ski crampons.
164
Solution: Scribe, stamp, roll. When skinning in hard snow conditions, everything
mentioned above with respect to the importance of good body position applies. But you
need more than body position. With each
step you must create a sticking surface,
then set the nap of the skin in the snow of
that surface, and finally roll the skin surface
onto that surface.
1. The scribe creates a narrow (12
centimeter) platform for your skins to
grip. To scribe your ski into the snow,
you must actively push your ski edge
in a horizontal direction into the hill
as you slide the ski forward, keeping
the edge in contact with the snow
(fig. 4.28).
2. To set your skins before you commit your full weight to the ski, stamp
your foot lightly through your heel,
being very careful not to lift the ski
or unweight it even slightly. Several
light stamps may work better than
one large stomp.
3. After the stamp, transfer the
remainder of your weight to the ski
roll your ankle slightly downhill to
rest the skin onto the surface created
by the scribe. This is totally counterintuitive for the downhill skier who
holds the edge by rolling the ski into
the slope.
Throughout all three steps, it is crucial
to keep a constant pressure down on the
Fig. 4.28 Correct scribing technique. Note the track left in the snow.
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Fig. 4.30 Use a ski pole by your foot to self-belay in hard snow skinning conditions. Push the pole
all the way into the snow up to the basket for best security.
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Ski Crampons
Ski crampons are a crucial tool for ski touring and ski mountaineering. They create
added security in conditions where even
the best skinning technique fails. However,
taking them on and off for every steep or
slippery spot adds unnecessary transitions
and can waste a lot of time on a tour (see
chapter 5, Transitions). The key is to understand when good technique will suffice versus
when ski crampons are the better option.
The technique for walking with ski
crampons is almost identical as for regular skinning. A few points to note with ski
crampons:
Track Setting
Track setting is both a skill and an art.
Learning to set a good track can be a maddening experience that alternates between
clear-cut concepts and hard-to-express ideas
about intuition and feel. In its execution
you will encounter endless nuances of terrain and a continuous flow of decisions to
be made. Logging hundreds of days in the
mountains isnt enough to achieve good
track-setting skills. As an aspiring artist,
you need an understanding of some basic
concepts to guide you and a keen sense of
self-evaluation when applying your skills.
In setting a line up a mountain you lay
your signature upon it, and the track you
create is a record of your relationship with
the terrain.
How do we approach this complicated
challenge? First lets look at the ideas of
intention and consistency.
The idea of intention is to encompass a
broad view of your tour. What is your intention for the day? What are your concrete
goals for the day? How to want to achieve
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168
track setting
Safety
Safety means freedom from danger, risk, or
injury. In the context of track setting, safety
determines the direction and location
of your track based on the presence of
objective hazards. In the safety-efficiencyspeed sequence, safety occupies the first
position for a reason. It is always your first
consideration as you make terrain choices
for your track, and it carries the highest
consequences if poor decisions are made.
This may seem obvious, but it is important to emphasize as a mental reminder
every time you move through the backcountry. If you set an inefficient track,
Fig. 4.33 Steady-angle track through meandering terrain near the Icefall Lodge, Canadian Rockies
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uphill movement
170
track setting
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uphill movement
Speed
Speed is the distance traveled divided by
the time this travel takes. In track setting,
speed means exactly the same thing: how
much time it takes to get from one point to
another. When evaluating the element of
speed in setting your track, you will be asking yourself, is this the fastest way I can get
to my objective?
Your speed can be affected by many
variables: pace, track angle and line, even
your method of travel. You may be able to
reach your goal faster by simply increasing your pace, or you may get there just
as fast by setting a steeper track or a more
direct line. Picture a wide, steep couloir: is
it faster to skin or to take your skis off and
boot straight up it?
Throughout the course of a tour, you will
encounter a hundred decisions that will either increase or decrease your speed. Your
task is to be aware of these and to make the
most of them according to your intention
for the day and your track.
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track setting
173
uphill movement
Fig. 4.35 Good setup for approaching a hill with a track that swings wide
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track setting
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Fig. 4.37 An aesthetic line down the mountain. Think about your uphill track in the same fashion:
can you make a beautiful line with your skis going uphill?
time. You can improve your bodys efficiency by improving your level of fitness, which
means being able to travel at a faster pace
using the same amount of energy. In short,
managing your pace is one of the most
powerful ways to manage your efficiency in
walking uphill.
Pace and speed. Its easy to think about
pace and speed as equivalent, but be carefultheyre not. Pace is your rate of travel
moving from A to B, and speed is how long
it took you to get from A to B. A fast pace
can certainly increase your speed, but its
by no means the only way to do so. In fact,
a medium pace might be the fastest way
to get to your destination. Often, a pace
that is too fast means youll burn through
your available fuel or redline and need to
stop for a break. Setting exactly the right
paceone that is above your most efficient
pace but below your redlinecan maximize
your speed in track setting.
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track setting
Troubleshooting the
Pitfalls of Track Setting
These are some common mistakes that happen again and again when track setting.
Missed opportunities to gain elevation. If you are looking ahead and maintaining a constant track angle this wont
happen...but somehow, missed opportunities seem to sneak into your track the moment you stop paying attention.
Elevation-gain optimism. It takes practice to develop an eye for where your track
will take you. Again and again youll find
that your track doesnt reach the spot you
were hoping it would, and you must change
your plan or put a kick turn in somewhere
youd rather avoid. You must work at it
until you can develop an eye for this spatial
knowledge.
Hesitation or uncertainty. You have
your intention, you have your progression...now all of a sudden you see so many
Fig. 4.38 Two track options to gain the same col. Track A has a few kick turns but keeps the track
angle low. Track B has no kick turns, but is steeper overall.
X
AB
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Chapter 5
Transitions
In ski touring and ski mountaineering,
a transition can be a change in locomotion, travel techniques, or equipment. For
example, changing from skinning to skiing
and back again, from moving uphill to skiing down, stopping to change in and out
of ski crampons, and the like. A lot of time
can be gained or lost when you make transitions. Do we care whether we get going
ten seconds faster or not? No. But planned
transitions keep the stress level down, and
efficient transitions during a difficult tour
can actually save hours and make us safer.
Think of a five-minute water break
that turns into a twenty-minute backpack
explosion. If you do this several times a day
(4 x 20 = 1 hour 20 minutes!), you could
jeopardize your objective or put yourself in
the wrong place at the wrong time. In addition to affecting trip duration, good transitioning is also about location and timing.
Switching your gear or mode of travel at the
wrong time or place, or using the wrong
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Fig. 5.1 Transition time on the BostonForbidden Col in the North Cascades: a quick transition from
skinning to booting where the couloir becomes too steep and exposed
gradually steepening slope ahead of you appears frozen. If youre a technically strong
skinner you might be able to move up the
slope without transitioning at all. Alternatively, you might be able to keep going with
the use of ski crampons. At some point it
may be safer to move up a 40-degree frozen
slope with boot crampons than on skis.
If you know youll have to put your
ski crampons on, plan your transition for
the bottom of the slope. There it will be
easy; no gear from an open backpack will
roll downhill, and you can do things in a
relaxed fashion. Putting your ski crampons
on in the middle of a frozen slope can be
quite dangerous if there are consequences
to a slip and fall.
Maybe its obvious from the bottom of
the slope that youll need boot crampons
higher up on a slope, but not down low. For
example, the slope above bottlenecks into
a couloir too steep to skin (fig. 5.1). You
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transitions
Fig. 5.2 Hard skinning surface called Firnspiegel created by a strong melt-freeze cycle. An ice
crust too thin for booting required ski crampons for the entire tour up, then delivered epic corn
on the descent.
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Transitions From
skinning to Skiing
For safety. Take off only one ski at a time,
deskin this ski, put the ski back on, and
then deskin the other ski.
This is especially important in glaciated
terrain. You are more likely to fall into a
crevasse if you take both skis off. If you are
traveling in a group, do not bunch up for
this transition, unless you are certain that
the particular spot offers absolute safety.
For efficiency. This simple one-ski-ata-time technique is actually a great energy
saver in deep snow conditions, since you
avoid sinking and wallowing in deep snow
and the resulting extra effort to get back
onto your skis.
For speed. If your ski descent is very
short, simply fold up the skins and loop
them through the hip belt of your backpack
(fig. 5.3). This way, you dont have to take
off your pack at all, let alone open it up.
The best speed considerations have nothing to
do with hurrying. You know youre getting
good at transitions when youre going fast
and havent hurried once all day.
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transitions
transitions From
skiing to Skinning
For safety. Make sure you choose a safe
spot for skinning up. This is obvious and
yet is often ignored. For example, if you ski
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transitions From
skinning to Booting
This transition can occur for a variety of
reasons: booting unroped up a couloir,
working through a section of terrain using
belayed climbing, or setting up a rappel
from a summit.
For safety. If youre making a sport
out of skinning all the way to the top of a
steep feature, you need room. Cutting back
and forth on a steepening and gradually
narrowing slope up to a col (a classic terrain feature) can be dangerous for several
reasons, and a transition to booting in the
right place can be an excellent way to manage the hazards.
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Cornice hazard
Boot track
Transition
Approach
ski track
Fig. 5.5 Complicated track setting in terrain where a fine line between efficiency and safety needed
to be found
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Fig. 5.6 Save transition time: stow your poles between your back and your backpack, and carry a ski
in each hand instead of strapping them to your pack.
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transitions
For efficiency. In putting on your harness for safety prior to traveling on a glacier, you have avoided possible inefficiency:
you wont be pausing midglacier to don
your harness if conditions change.
For speed. Use a harness that you can
put on without taking your skis off. Have
your glacier-travel gear neatly bound and
clipped to your harness (fig. 5.7).
transitions from
Unroped to Roped
Travel in glaciated
Terrain
For safety. Going from unroped to roped
travel is another tricky topic, and the
proper execution of this judgment call is
completely situational.
Though it can be highly inefficient and
unnecessary to rope up on glaciers while
touring uphill, it is not wrong to do so. It
can be tough to choose the right technique,
especially if there is crevasse-fall hazard
in steep and potentially frozen terrain. For
a complete discussion of roping up, see
Roped Travel in chapter 6.
If youre transitioning from unroped to
roped travel in a downhill skiing situation,
be prepared to reduce your speed downhill.
Roped skiing technique has to be impeccable, flawlessly coordinated, and you must
be aware of the limited holding power
you have in the event of a fall (especially
in hard-snow conditions)gravity will be
working against you. Navigating crevassefall hazard in downhill mode can be very
tricky. Skiing downhill while roped is most
often done with each person snowplowing
or sideslipping. Also see Advanced Skiing
Techniques: Skiing on Belay in chapter 7.
For efficiency. A certain amount of prerigging is highly advantageous in the event
of a crevasse fall (see Prerigging for Glacier
Travel in chapter 10). However, the prerigging should be kept clean and efficient.
This means that your harness should be set
up to allow for efficient multifunctioning
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189
Chapter 6
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Protection in
Ski Mountaineering
During the course of attaining a ski mountaineering objective, opportunities for
building anchors and placing protective
gear abound. Entering the top of a steep
couloir, rappelling over an unexpected cliff
band, rescuing a partner whos fallen into a
crevasse, and negotiating the steep icy pitch
to make the summit are all possibilities in
the ski mountaineering realm.
Unlike the climber at the local crag, the
ski mountaineer travels through a variety of
mediums: rock, snow, and ice. Understanding
how to protect each type of material is essential to your safety during a ski mountaineering tour.
Placing gear or protection is done to protect the lead climber by creating a means
for attaching the rope to the rock or ice as
the climber leads up and away from the belay. You also place gear to make up the different points of an anchor, used for either
belaying a fellow climber or for rappelling.
For ski mountaineering, we recommend
carrying a small rock rack, ice protection,
and a rope suitable for your objective
(fig. 6.2).
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Very likely
Even chance
Unacceptable
Ha
za
rd
lin
Acceptable
Unlikely
Good
Mediocre
Bad
Consequences
Fig. 6.3. Be aware of the likelihood to consequence ratio when reaching decisions. The
more dangerous the potential results of your
decision, the less likely those results shouldbe.
If a particular resultis very likely, you want it to
have minimal negative consequences. Where
the line falls will vary from person to person,
but be aware when you are approaching the
zone of unacceptable hazard and rethink your
decisions if they cross your personal hazard line.
Anchor Basics
An anchor must be strong enough to hold
the force applied to it. In other words, it
cannot fail under the applied load. In ski
mountaineering, you will be building
anchors of varying strength to hold various
loadsremember: likelihood vs. consequence and consider your anticipated load.
Use this concept anytime you choose to
build an anchor in the mountains, whether
during an alpine climb or on a ski mountaineering trip.
The mountaineering world has several
acronyms to help in evaluating anchors. We
will use EARNEST and cover some anchor
basics.
Equalized. Each and every component of
the anchor should have the load distributed
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anchors on snow
evenly between them. In ski mountaineering, you may often have a single anchor
pointobviously this rule doesnt apply in
those cases.
Angle. When building a multipoint
anchor (two or more points sharing the
load), consider the angle of the sling or cord
joining the points. The goal is to have the
smallest angle at the master point between
the pieces of protection (angles greater than
90 degrees will actually increase the load
on the anchor).
Redundant. We often use more than one
point in an anchor so that if one point fails,
the whole anchor doesnt failredundancy.
Its okay to use a single-point anchor (like
a sizeable tree) if you are positive that it
wont fail when you apply your load.
No Extension. In a multipoint anchor,
if one piece should fail, other pieces of the
anchor should not get shock loaded.
Strong. The anchor should be strong
enough to support the load applied to it.
Consider the forces involved and build
accordingly. Overbuilding every anchor
by a great deal may not be necessary and
can waste a bunch of time. In rock climbing, building extremely strong multipoint
anchors is the norm. In ski mountaineering, consider building your anchors strong
enough to hold the potential load applied
to it. Practice your anchors in a controlled
environment so you understand the holding
power of a particular anchor in different
conditions.
Timely. In the mountains, speed can
equal safety. Become proficient at building
adequate anchors so you dont introduce
Anchors on Snow
Anchors on snow can be built using your
skis, using just the snow itself, or using
features present in the terrain.
THINX Anchors
Anchors made with your skis can be some
of the strongest anchors you can build. A
helpful acronym to remember these anchors is THINX. Note that this acronym does
not necessarily list the anchors in order of
strength. Each letter represents the shape
of the anchor made with your skis.
Factors such as snow type and consistency, on-hand materials, time available, and
possible consequences of a fall are all considered when determining which anchor
to build. Strength is the main consideration
when choosing one of the THINX anchors. In
general, one way to remember the relative
strength of each anchor (shy of testing it to
failure) is to observe how much snow the
anchor is pulling againstthe greater the
amount, the stronger the anchor is.
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196
anchors on snow
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198
anchors on snow
well for this. The second ski is simply keeping the first ski from moving and bending
toward the load.
Girth-hitch or clove-hitch a sling to the
downhill ski at the snow surface, being
careful to not wrap the sling around the
binding bar. The end of the sling toward the
load is the master point.
X-anchor. The X-anchor (fig. 6.8)
improves upon the I by creating a greater
surface area of snow to pull against. Firm
snow is also needed for this anchor.
To begin, push the tail of a ski into the
snow at a diagonal, with the tip facing
uphill by 10 or 15 degrees. Push the second
ski into the snow, base to base with the first
ski, creating an X.
Snow Bollards
The bollard can be an extremely strong
anchor with a huge advantage that many
other anchors dont have: you can rappel
off them and leave no gear behind. The
concept of the bollard is to dig out a teardrop-shaped trench in cohesive snow or ice,
resulting in a teardrop-shaped mound that
you can wrap a rope around (figs. 6.9 and
6.10). The bollard works best with strong,
consolidated snow. The stronger the snow,
the smaller the bollard needs to be. There is
no rule of thumb for the size of the bollard;
this is a good anchor to practice and test
prior to using in an actual situation. The
only real disadvantages of the bollard are
that it takes a fair amount of time to construct and ropes can get stuck on it.
First, score the outline of the bollard in
the snow in the shape of a teardrop. The
thicker part of the teardrop faces uphill or
away from the direction of pull. The side
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200
anchors on snow
Downhill
The mountains present many opportunities to provide security for yourself and
your partners. Many of these opportunities
require thinking outside the box of conventional anchor and belay stations. Terrain
features made out of snow and ice can provide exceptional security and require little
time to construct.
Moats. A moat is the gap between the
steep part of the mountain and the snowpack, formed as a result of the entire snowpack creeping slowly downhill. The general
concept of a moat belay is for the belayer to
get inside the moat and to become a counterbalance for the climber (fig. 6.12).
For the belay to be effective, you must
ensure a stance that allows good control of
the rope and no chance of you being pulled
out of the moat. Shallow crevasses can be
used in the same manner as moats, just
make sure youre on a solid surface when
you go in.
Snowy knife-edge ridges. For the
alpinist, sharp ridges of snow are aesthetic
and provide exciting exposure (fig. 6.13).
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202
Rock Protection
and Anchors
Many ski mountaineering objectives require
climbing on or near rock. Sometimes youll
be able to use natural features for anchors,
other times youll need to place protection.
Nuts
Nuts are considered passive protection and
can be used to create intermediate protection for part or all of an anchor. Nuts are
inexpensive and provide great security
when placed correctly, and they can be a
cheap way to build rappel anchors if you
need to descend.
Carry a small set (three to five) ranging
from sizes 3 to 7 (fig. 6.2 and 6.14a). Nuts
are slotted into a crack or flake in the rock;
therefore you need to have nuts that correspond to the sizes of cracks in the rock.
Rock Protection
Carrying a small rock rack can give you
many more options for security and more
chance of success in safely getting to and
from your chosen summit. Certain routes
may only require one or two pieces of gear,
while others may have much more extensive and exposed sections on rock, requiring an alpine rack. What follows are general
guidelines for rock protection in a ski
mountaineering environmentsee Climbing and Mountaineering in the appendix
for additional resources.
In your tour planning stage, gather as
much information on your objective as
possible and adjust your rack accordingly.
Rock gear is heavy, and a ski mountaineer
is always concerned with weight. That said,
a small rock rack can be an excellent safety
net when skiing into the unknown. Weve
all taken a rock rack for a ski tour and
never used any of it, but knowing we had
it allowed for continued exploration and,
ultimately, a safe and successful tour.
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Cams
Cams are considered active protection
because the springs in the cam are actively
holding it in its location. Cams are expandable and therefore versatile, fitting in a
range of crack sizes. Cams weigh more and
cost more than nuts. They do however, give
you many options and offer quick-to-place
protection in smooth-sided cracks, where
nuts may not be suitable, often making
cams worth their extra weight and cost.
A typical ski mountaineering rack may
consist of two or three cams ranging in size
from 0.5 to 2 inches (fig. 6.2 and 6.14b).
Depending on the route, you may want to
carry cams on the smaller or larger size of
this range. Cams bigger than 2 inches weigh
a fair amount and usually dont fall into the
standard rack for ski objectives.
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Pitons
Pitons are an invaluable tool to the ski
mountaineer. Pitons are inexpensive pieces
of protection made of steel, soft iron, or
titanium. Think of pitons as nails you can
attach a quickdraw to that come in a variety
of shapes and sizes (fig. 6.15).
These nails need to be hammered into
cracks in the rock to achieve their strength,
so youll need some sort of hammer for the
job. Many modern ice axes and ice tools
have a hammer in place of an adze, and
you should consider carrying one of these
if you expect to use pitons. Because of the
hammering needed for placement, a fair
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placement. Warning: if the tone stabilizes before the piton eye is flush with
the rock, the piton placement is limited
in its strength.
Tip: If you cannot bring the piton eye flush
with the rock, but you feel the placement is
solid otherwise, you can girth-hitch a sling
around the shaft of the piton, just as you
would for an ice screw (fig. 6.19).
If you want to remove the piton, leave
enough room on either side of it to hammer
it back and forth to loosen and remove it.
Practice, practice, practiceonce again, on
the ground at your local crag, preferably with
an experienced partner or instructor.
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Ice Protection
and Anchors
Knowing about ice protection and anchors
is important in ski mountaineering. You
may encounter ice in numerous situations
on your ski tours. Without skills, these
encounters can be turnaround points or
potentially dangerous.
Ice Screws
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208
weak
strong
strongest
(5-10 degrees)
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V-Thread
(Abalakov Anchor)
The idea behind the V-thread anchor is to
create two intersecting holes (the V) with an
ice screw so that you can thread a piece of
cord through the V and tie it off.
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Ice Bollards
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Seated Belays
The need for a rope as protection depends
on the angle of the slope, the consequence
of a fall, and you and your partners comfort level. With belays as with anchors, its
helpful to keep in mind the idea of a security progression: given the likelihood and
consequences of a fall, how much security
do you need to provide? We discuss belays
in a progression of increasing security.
Sometimes, natural features that can be
used as anchors, such as moats and rock,
dont exist on your route. So building an
anchor made with your skis and belaying
off it may be a good idea. If you feel some
protection with a rope is needed, but its not
necessary to construct a full anchor, you
may choose to use the seated belay. You
can also use a seated belay in conjunction
with a ski or other anchor.
A seated belay can be quickly constructed using the belayers body weight
and stance to provide the security, and it is
an effective anchor on both snow and rock.
The key to a good seated belay is the solid
and well-braced position of the belayer.
Situations when a seated belay is
useful:
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seated belays
holding power. Use the safety-efficiencyspeed mantra when applying any of these
techniques to your situation, and remember that safety always trumps the other
two. When in doubt, increase the level of
security so youre comfortable knowing you
can adequately protect yourself and your
partner.
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There are several positions for seated belays that offer increasing levels of security.
The first is the basic bucket seat that is
often used in alpine climbing. This works
great in the couloir that youre booting up.
It also works best with softer snowpossibly better than the THINX anchors in really
soft snow (see Anchors on Snow earlier
this chapter for details on THINX anchors).
The basic idea is to create a bucket seat
for the belayer that faces downhill. Do this
by digging or scooping a deep bucket for
your bum. Next, settle into this with your
legs wider than shoulder-width apart and a
slight bend in your knees. Try not to disturb
the snow between your legsthis is adding
resistance to you being pulled downhill.
Kick your heels deep into the snow, creating a solid and deep platform for your feet
to push againstthis allows you to turn
into a human shock absorber. Finally, youll
want to be set up to lean your back into the
hill (away from the direction of pull).
Once the belay position is built, you can
either wrap the rope behind your back for a
classic hip belay, or you may choose to belay off your harness using a Munter hitch.
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seated belays
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216
roped travel
Benefits:
Reversibleyou can quickly switch to a lower from climbing
Quick to set up
Allows for rapid feeding of the rope
Dynamicmay be used in conjunction with a marginal anchor
Roped Travel
Rope Handling
and Roping Up
A properly coiled rope stays together when
youre carrying it and comes apart easily
when you want to use it. Quite often a rope
doesnt fit into a backpack, so it gets stowed
under the top lid of the pack or draped over
the top of the pack (this simple technique
requires a butterfly coil).
At some point the rope needs to come
out of the pack. Often the terrain is simple
enough that roped travel, in one shape or
another, is possible. So how do you rope
up? The basic progression of roping up
doesnt really change from ski mountaineering to alpine climbing, ice climbing back
to rock scrambling.
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218
219
Prerigging for
Glacier Travel
If you spend time traveling on glaciers,
it is important to understand how to help
yourself and your partners if a crevasse
fall occurs. Prerigging for glacier travel has
two potential uses: one, if you fall into a
crevasse you can use the cordelette/hitch
as your waist looppart of your ascending system in self-rescue; two, if someone
else falls into a crevasse, you can use the
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what about
the Texas kick?
The Texas kick is a traditional prerigged system involving two loops for your legs. The
benefit of the two loops is easier climbing
on a free-hanging rope for long ascents, but
the disadvantage of this system is that it is
complicated to learn and rig. It also gets
in the way during glacier travel. Often you
will have a crevasse wall to brace on as you
ascend, so using one leg loop (as described
below) works great.
Roped Uphill
Travel with Skis
Why would you not have skis on when there
is crevasse-fall hazard? Dont skis distribute
your body weight more evenly on snow?
Think about how an actual crevasse fall
might come about. Would it result from
popping through a snowbridge (crevasse-fall
hazard) or from sliding into a crevasse after
falling on steep frozen terrain (falling/sliding hazard)? Consider where the objective
hazard originates and most likely your decision to keep your skis on or take them off
will become easier. If the hazard is a direct
fall into a crevasse because of a failed snowbridge, being on skis is the smarter way
to go because the skis will distribute your
body weight over a relatively large area.
Although a lot of time on glaciers is
spent unroped in ski mountaineering, the
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Fig. 6.30 Using a probe to increase safety in crevassed terrain while relying on the security of the rope
If youre roping up because of crevassefall hazard, dont stop short in your safety
precautions. Prerig for what would turn into
your load-transfer system or self-rescue
system. That said, try to avoid complicatedlooking prerig systems that are constantly in
your way while youre moving. Try to find a
balance of clean preparedness (see Prerigging
for Glacier Travel earlier in this chapter).
It is common practice to simply distribute the length of rope in equal amounts
among team members. This often works
out quite well, but in certain situations you
might be better off with a larger distance
between the first and second person. This
way the team has more reaction time. Poor
visibility can contribute to crevasse-fall hazard, and this technique can improve safety.
For example, say your rope team
consists of three people and you have a
140-foot rope. One person can carry a few
Roped Uphill
Travel without Skis
In certain situations it is advantageous to
travel without skis. This may seem a bit
counterintuitive, but there are good reasons
for it.
The most compelling reason for skiless
travel in crevassed terrain is if the terrain is
steep or frozen. Lets face it: boot crampons
have more purchase than a ski edge will
ever have. If you assess the objective hazard
to be a potential slip that might land you in
a crevasse, taking your skis off and putting
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Uphill Travel on
Rock: Ski Boots
Since this is a ski touring book, we assume
youll be wearing alpine touring or telemark
boots. Movement on rock in these boots can
be awkward because of their high cuffs and
lack of ankle mobilityespecially compared to rock shoes or climbing boots.
A good ski boot is supposed to provide
good lateral stability, meaning the ankle
is immobilized side to side. You also have
reduced articulation to the front and very
little articulation toward the back. Were not
making ski boots sound like very attractive
climbing boots...thats because theyre not!
To make matters worse, the duck lip of a
tele boot eliminates all toe sensitivity.
A good mountaineering boot, on the
other hand, provides a sophisticated balance between ankle mobility, foot support,
and sensitivity. Due to the basic nature of
a ski boot, a great deal of this sensitivity is
lost and this needs to be taken into account
when climbing.
That said, steep terrain can actually
be surprisingly manageable in ski boots,
especially when it is stepped in nature. But
traversing or downclimbing slabby rockor
any movement that requires rolling your
anklescan be challenging, since the ski
boot does not allow for enough mobility.
If you anticipate using your boots a lot
for true ski mountaineering, meaning you
might be climbing without skis on your
feet, consider a boot that has a bit shorter
cuff. It might affect your skiing ability
negatively, but the touring and walking/
climbing performance will be better. When
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225
Fig. 6.32 One of the authors short roping in the Ortler Mountains in Italy (Photo by Dan Patituci)
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227
Fig. 6.33 On the way to the Mittaghorn in the Bernese Alps of Switzerland
Short Pitching
Short pitching is used in the mountains as
a technique to isolate the crux of a short
section of terrain. You move as close as
possible to the crux in short-roping mode,
then you create a suitable anchor below
the crux, fix your partner to this anchor,
and climb the short section with or without
a belay. Once above this moderate crux,
you create another anchor or use a terrain
feature to belay your rope partner up.
If you fall without a belay (which should
be low on the likelihood scale), the anchor
below the crux would catch you and keep
your partner from getting torn off the
mountain. Important: the rope should go
from you to the anchor below and then to
your rope partner. When you set up, make
sure that any potential pull will be on the
anchor and not on your rope partner.
228
If you end up climbing a substantial distance from your original anchor to the next
anchor with several pieces of protection
in between, you have moved from short
pitching to pitching it out in fully belayed
climbing.
Belayed Climbing
The transition from short roping and short
pitching to fully belayed climbing on a full
pitch can be quite fluid. Once in the traditional climbing mode, climbing in full pitches can seem very tempting. Sometimes this
is the best idea, and other times it is smarter
to keep the pitches shorter so that you can
see and communicate with your partner.
The best solution will depend on the
situation, but we advise against going out
of sight and especially out of earshot. As
in so many other situations, good and easy
communication is key. If you cant see
and or hear your partner, the chances for
a disastrous communication error go up
substantially.
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230
231
232
were quite confident that you would be able to top out the last few meters without any
additional protection. You were just about to carry on when the little smart voice in your
head started piping up again.
Are you pretty confident, or are you absolutely sure? What are the consequences of
a fall?
It didnt take you long to decide that you wanted a belay and that you were going to use
your nice new ice screw for protection. You cranked in the screw while one of your buddies
put you on belay. Just about when you were done cranking in the screw, you heard the
reassuring call from below: Dude, youre on belay.
Suddenly, it was like somebody had taken all the stress off you, stress you hadnt
noticed consciously. You climbed the last 5 meters to the ridge crest and built an anchor
for your friends to belay them from the top. The two tied in close to each other but with
enough space that the first climber would not be kicking the second climber in the head
if he fell, and they climbed up the headwall. Of course right as the first climber crested
the ridge and his knot came to your nifty Munter belay hitch, the second climber was
right in the iciest spot.
You were so glad you knew how to tie off that Munter belay with a mule hitch, and
you were also glad you knew the Munter hitch in the first place. So you muled it off and
prepared a second locking carabiner in your bomber anchor.
And right then it happened. The second climber fell. But your system was ready for it
and he ended up falling 1 whole foot. He had fallen into your locked-off belay. Instead of
getting scared, you were excited and proud that you had recognized the inherent dangers
of the headwall.
The second climber stepped up a bit, which gave you enough slack in the rope to put
him on belay behind the first climbers knot. You unclipped the first Munter hitch and then,
a few seconds later, you all stood together on the summit ridge. A flat and simple ridge led
to the nearby summit.
The snow seemed soft, unconsolidated, and an elevated level of crevasse-fall hazard
was apparent. Again you recognized the changing hazard, roped up long for glacier-travel
mode, made sure that you were properly prerigged, and continued to the summit without
any trouble.
What a great ski tour! Hazards did exist. Thats just the way it is in the mountains. But
with good judgment and some skill you were able to mitigate them.
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Chapter 7
Martin Volken enjoying early summer skiing on the Coleman Glacier, Mount Baker, Washington
Backcountry
vs.Alpine Gear
The lines are getting blurry between gear
used for backcountry ski touring and gear
used in the ski area, but there are undeniable differences. As discussed in chapter
1, Gear and Equipment, alpine touring
(AT) and telemark gear was designed to be
lighter, since ski touring means that you
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237
It can be hard to tone it down in highavalanche-hazard conditions or highconsequence terrain when the powder
is good. After all, thats why you got the
touring gear in the first place. You want to
access the goods. But keep in mind that
youre out of the area and therefore further
from help if you get hurt. You may want to
ski less aggressively as a result.
Survival Skiing
Techniques for
the Backcountry
There are significant differences in equipment and snow conditions between the ski
area and the backcountry. Both of these
categories change the rules of the downhill
skiing game. By understanding them and
having the tools to deal with them, your
backcountry experience can be much more
fun and free of injury.
How Gear
Affects Technique
Depending on the backcountry tool you are
using, you may need to deal with different
gear configurations in the backcountry.
Below are some general considerations that
can apply.
Skiing with a pack. The added weight
on your backeven with a day packshifts
you back from the center of gravity youre
accustomed to. As a result, you can end up
driving from the back seat.
Boots. Your AT or telemark boots may
be lighter, have softer flex, have fewer
buckles, be lower on your calf, and have
238
Fig. 7.1 Sidestepping stance with skis perpendicular to the fall line
239
240
241
If you get tired or conditions turn bad, use the stem christy to control the turns down
to the end of the tour or to better snow. Simply put your uphill ski out to a stem and start
cutting the snow into the fall line. Once comfortable, shift and transfer all of your weight
to the outside ski and steer a completed turn.
Freddy Grossniklaus is a UIAGM-certified Swiss mountain
guide, ski instructor, and ex Demo-team member.
Advanced Skiing
Techniques:
Skiing on Belay
Skiing on belay is a technique that can be
used when the consequences of an uncontrolled fall and slide are unacceptable. It
also lets you ski into a steep slope or couloir,
and check snow stability in the heart of
the hazard without endangering yourself.
It might be the beginning of a steep ski
descent and you might want to get a feel for
the first few turns. Before skiing on belay, it
is paramount for you to accurately evaluate
your abilities in the given terrain and snow
conditions. Ski on belay when the probability of a fall is low (because of good skiing
technique), but the consequences of a fall
are high. If you expect to fall every turn,
you should consider another method of
dealing with the slope.
Skiing on belay is an advanced technique for both the belayer and the skier. On
the part of the belayer, it requires specific
technique to allow the skier to move freely.
On the part of the skier, it requires a fairly
high level of skiing ability, as it can be difficult to turn with a rope on.
Considerations
for the Belayer
Setting up a belay for a skier is different
than most belays, primarily because the
belayers goal will be to feed rope out in a
series of dynamic movements each time
the skier makes a turn. The type of anchor
used depends entirely on the terrain.
However, the placement of the anchor and
the belayer should take the following into
consideration.
Security. Skiing on belay has the potential to dynamically load the belayer and
the anchor. The belayer must evaluate the
terrain; if the stance is not strong enough,
he should add security by tying in to an
anchor. Further, once attached to an anchor,
the belayer must be prepared to hold a dynamic fall on a hip belaybelaying from a
Munter hitch or belay device doesnt allow
the rope to feed freely enough and either
way will lock up and jerk the skier off her
feet. If the terrain, anchor, or belayer is not
suitably strong, another technique should
be considered.
Visibility. In order to feed rope out at
the right time and in the correct amount,
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243
Considerations
for the Skier
If you decide to ski on belay, it is important
to have the correct tie-in and to use highly
controlled technique for each turn.
Tie-in for belayed skiing. The normal
tie-in point on the front of the harness is
awkward to ski with because the skier must
constantly flip the rope over her head with
each turn. More importantly, if the rope
comes tight too soon from the belayer, the
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Chapter 8
Staying Dry
Staying dry in a winter environment can be
relatively easy in cold temperatures or next
to impossible if the temperature hovers
around the freezing point.
In terms of staying dry in moderately
cold temperatures, you might as well
confront the fact that there will be some
discomfort involved. We (the authors) live
in the Pacific Northwest and guide in the
North Cascades of Washington a lot, where
the mountains sometimes seem to be
drowning in a 15- to 20-foot snowpack of
0C/32F snow. If a body of 37C/98.6F is
put into this environment, some melting
will occur. And with warm temperatures,
the relative humidity can be high; in fact
its above 90 percent most of the time. This
extremely maritime snowpack brings its
own advantages, but ease of temperature
regulation is certainly not one of them.
248
staying warm
Staying Warm
Since we are warm-blooded animals, our
bodies attempt to keep our internal temperature constant. We continually generate
heat and our bodies must take active steps
to lose that heat. The other side of this coin
is in cold weather, in which your body must
249
Planned Shelters
After a long, hard day of ski touring, you
have arrived at your camp. All went well
and ideally you should still have some
energy to build a nice camp. You carried
your shelter with you, but which option
did you choose? Shelters vary in efficiency
and comfort, so choose one that meets your
requirements for both.
Bivy Bags
Pros. Bivy bags are light and compact.
They have a small footprint and take up
very little space in your pack. They are
good in alpine applications where there
might not be enough room to pitch a tent.
In good weather they can be the lightest option and make for great star gazing.
Cons. A good bivy bag weighs nearly
half as much as a modern two-person tent
and does not deliver the same amount
of protective space. Tents are also more
breathable. We recommend a modern twoperson tent, unless youre on your own or
need to camp somewhere with small camp
platforms.
Lightweight Floorless Shelters
Pros. Floorless shelters (like Black Diamonds Mega Mid) are superlight, considering that they can accommodate three
250
Fig. 8.2 Expedition camp setting on Mount Logan, Canada (Photograph by Greg Allen)
Snow Shelters
Building a snow shelter is an option for
winter camping. If you are venturing out
into the more remote backcountry you
should be able to build an emergency snow
shelter (see chapter 10 for a discussion of
emergency shelters). What follows are two
nonemergency versions, should you have
the time and inclination.
Side of a Snowbank:
The Snow Cave
If the snowpack is sufficiently high, you
could use the side of a snowbank to create a
Snowbank
Backpack
Cold trap
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The Digloo
The digloo, as the name implies, is a combination between the well-known but seldombuilt igloo and a snow cave that is formed
out of a mound of snow.
A digloo takes some time to build and is
most suitable if there are multiple people
involved. Digloos also have great base-camp
applications if a storm might last for days.
Staying in a tent that is constantly rattled
by the wind for days on end, or having to
cook in stormy conditions, can be rather
demoralizing.
5 feet
Snow quarry
5 feet
Fig. 8.5a Step 3: Digloo construction
5 feet
Snowpile
Cold trap
Snow surface
8 feet
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planned shelters
5 feet
3 feet
2 feet
8 feet
Fig. 8.5b Step 4: Digloo construction
253
Top lid
simple roof structure. If timed properly, the person digging from below
will be close enough to the middle
of the cone so that the person on top
will end up popping through the ceiling of the lower hole (fig. 8.7). The
digloo can then be improved, refined,
and enlarged as much as you want.
Building time for three-person shelter:
1.52 hours.
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On a Day Tour
Before. In the morning before your tour,
avoid simple carbs like honey, fruit juices,
and fruit (including bananas) that will spike
your blood sugar and then make it drop.
If you do eat these, also eat some fat and
protein to lower the glycemic response.
Make sure you get enough protein in the
morninga protein shake or protein bars
work great. Drink 1216 ounces of fluid
1.52 hours prior to your tour. Caffeine
will squeeze some of the water out of your
cells, so keep hydrating after your morning
coffee.
During. Dont wait until youre hungry or thirsty to eat or drink. Eat a snack
every 12 hours, depending on your exertion level. Trail mixes of nuts and dried
fruit, cheese, and some meat (or fish, like
sardines) all travel well and will help you
achieve your recommended 60-15-25 ratio
of carbs-protein-fat. A fast way to replenish
depleted muscle glycogen is with simple
carbs (like energy drinks, Gu, gummies,
honey), but you will burn through them
more quicklycombine them with fats,
protein, and fiber to keep your blood sugar
up after the immediate sugar burn. Aim for
68 ounces of fluid every 1520 minutes, or
1632 ounces per hour.
After. Replenish the fuel your exercise
has burned, restore your bodys hydration,
and make sure enough protein is available for muscle repair and growth. Highglycemic carbs are a good way to replace
depleted glycogen, especially in the first
four hours post-tour. Hydrate to replace
On a Multiday Tour
Before. You may be able to increase your
glycogen reserves by carbohydrate loading,
consuming higher than usual levels of carbs
(70 percent of your calories) for the week
prior to your tour. Important: Only do this
if you are in excellent condition and free
from health problems like diabetes. Continue to get adequate protein. Taper your
exercise one week prior, and take a rest day
the day before.
During. Carry calorie-dense foods to
keep your pack weight down. This means
including foods with fats. Plan on enough
snacks to eat once every 12 hours, with
a mix of carbs, protein, and fat. Look for
high-calorie, high-protein energy bars (but
make sure theyre palatable!). Bars with
extra vitamins are good too. Bring lots of
drink powder, with at least 68 percent carb
content.
After each day of the tour. Evening
meals should replenish glycogen levels
dehydrated potatoes are always a good idea
because theyre light and high on the glycemic index. Bring enough protein (dried
sausage is light; sardines have protein and
good fats in them), especially if you plan
on strenuous days. Some evidence suggests
that protein needs rise with repeated
high-intensity exercise. When choosing
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At Altitude
Above 8000 feet, your body becomes
significantly affected by the decrease in
available oxygen. One major issue becomes
dehydration; your oxygen requirements
increase at high altitude. Bring drink mixes
to make the needed volume of water more
palatable; drink noncaffeinated hot drinks
whenever possible; make your water easy
to reach while moving. Monitor your urine
for output and color, and drink more than
you think you need to.
Growing evidence suggests an increased
reliance on carbohydratesand slightly
decreased reliance on fatsas altitude
increases. Fat requires more oxygen to
metabolize at altitude than carbs do. Maintain a high level of carbs at altitude, but
consume enough protein to protect against
muscle loss. One of the biggest problems
with eating at higher altitudes can be loss of
appetite. If youre out for a long trip, bring
a variety of food and drink, and be aware
that bland foods are often more appetizing
at high altitudes.
Mountain Ethics
The Leave No Trace (LNT) Principles of
outdoor ethics form the framework of Leave
No Traces message. Not all the principles
have obvious applications in ski touring and
256
mountain ethics
257
258
Chapter 9
Chris Miske surveying the approaching storm near Washington Pass, Washington
Just about everybody who has spent significant time in the mountains has a good
weather story. Of course, weather stories
can resemble fishing stories: as time goes
on, temperatures tend to get colder, snow
dumps deeper, and wind speeds get higher.
Nonetheless, mountain weather can be
extreme and changes can come about
abruptly.
Weather happens all the time all around
us, but not until we leave our sheltered
21C/70F homes do we really start to pay
attention to it. Once we enter the relative
wildness of the mountains, talking about
the weather becomes more than watercooler chitchatits one of the most important topics of the day. The weather affects
just about everything on a ski tour: whether
or not we go in the first place, what route
we take, what we wear, and, in the end,
how much fun we have.
Mountain
weather Basics
So how does the weather happen, and more
particularly, how does mountain weather
happen? What follows is a brief overview of
complex processes. For more detail, Mountain Weather by Jeff Renner is an excellent
resource.
The earths axis and rotation relative to
the sun cause strong heating and cooling
of the earths surface and atmosphere as
different regions are exposed to more or
less solar radiation. This differential heating of air drives our weather. The heating
and cooling of air occurs with the following
general patterns. Warm air can absorb more
moisture than cold air (i.e., is more humid),
and warm air is also less dense than cold
air. Pressure, temperature, and humidity
differentials in the atmosphere drive movement of air masses. Higher-density air
262
Atmospheric Pressure
Atmospheric pressure is a measure of the
weight of the air. It is expressed in millibars
(1013 millibars at sea level) or in inches
of mercury (29.92 inches of mercury at
sea level). The atmosphere is thicker at
the equator; thus atmospheric pressure is
higher there than at sea level somewhere in
the Arctic.
As you go up in altitude, atmospheric
pressure decreases. At first, the decrease
Altitude (ft/m)
29.92 / 1013
20,000 / 6097
13.75 / 464
1000 / 305
28.86 / 977
22,000 / 6707
12.64 / 428
2000 / 610
27.82 / 941
24,000 / 7317
11.56 / 392
3000 / 914
26.82 / 908
26,000 / 7926
10.62 / 360
4000 / 1220
25.84 / 875
28,000 / 8536
9.70 / 329
5000 / 1524
24.89 / 842
30,000 / 9146
8.87 / 301
10,000 / 3048
20.58 / 697
15,000 / 4573
16.88 / 571
18,000 / 5487*
14.94 / 508
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Fronts
Fronts are the boundaries between different air masses. Meteorologists differentiate
between four different types of fronts:
Warm front. This is a front where a
warm air mass is replacing a colder air mass
(fig. 9.2). In the mountains this could mean:
The temperature could rise.
The snow quality could decrease.
The avalanche hazard could increase,
if higher density snow falls on lower
density snow.
Since warm air is not as dense as cold
air, temperature inversions could occur.
If this warm front is associated with precipitation, it could bring freezing rain.
Cold front. This is a front where a cold
air mass is replacing a warmer air mass (fig.
9.3). In the mountains this could mean:
Warm air
rm
Wa
Towering, puffy
cumulus clouds
nt
fro
Sheet-like
stratus clouds
Warm
air
Cold
front
Cold
air
Warm
air
264
Mixed
Mixed
stratus,
stratus,
cumulus
cumulus
clouds
clouds
Colder
air
Warm
air
Cold
air
OR
Mixed stratus,
cumulus clouds
Cold
air
Warm
air
Colder
air
Temperature
Finally, something not so fuzzy. Air temperature is an absolute measurement. Of
course different people perceive it differently and changing humidity saturation
can change the perceived temperature
like not much else. Wind also changes the
perceived temperature, though new windchill calculations make the numbers seem
less frightening (fig. 9.5).
265
10
Air temperature of 5F
0
-10
Wind chill
formula
-20
-30
-40
-50
0
15
25
35
45
55
65
75
85
95
105 115
Anatomy of a Glacier
Glaciers are relatively simple in their
makeup, but very complex in how they
behave. Explaining and understanding fully
how glaciers work exceeds the scope of this
book, but a basic understanding of glaciology will increase your safety and enjoyment
in the mountains.
266
Anatomy of a glacier
Moat
Accumulation zone
Ablation zone
Snowfield
Firn line
Bergschrund
Snow and nv
Snowbridge
Ice
Icefall
Crevasses
Nunatak
Moraine
267
a
b
h
c
d
f
j
e
a.
b.
c.
d.
e.
f.
g.
h.
i.
j.
k.
ICE FEATURES
Moat
Bergschrund
Firn line
Nunatak
Crevasses
Marginal crevasses
Terminus (snout)
Accumulation zone
MORAINE FEATURES
Medial moraine
Lateral moraine
Terminal moraine
k
l
m
p
o
l.
m.
n.
o.
Moraine lake
Braided outwash stream
Old terminal moraine
Old lateral moraine
Anatomy of a glacier
i
c
a
h
a.
b.
c.
d.
Ogives
Icefall
Compression zone
Accumulation basin
e.
f.
g.
h.
Pocket glacier
Snout of retreating glacier
Glacier polished bedrock
Crevasse zone
Fig. 9.8 Chickamin Glacier in the North Cascades, Washington (Photograph by John Scurlock)
269
g
h
e
f
i
a
b
c
a.
b.
c.
d.
e.
Accumulation zone
Firn line
Ablation zone
Pocket glacier without current accumulation zone
Icefall
f.
g.
h.
i.
Fig. 9.9 Eldorado/Klawatti area in the North Cascades in early fall of 2005 after the non-winter
of 20042005 (Photograph by John Scurlock)
270
Anatomy of a glacier
Bergschrunds
A bergschrund is a crevasse that occurs
where a glacier detaches itself at its highest margin from a rock face, a couloir, or
a mountainside where it is too steep for a
glacier to form.
What you should know. A bergschrund
wall normally forms perpendicular to the
slope. This means that if the upside slope of
a bergschrund has an angle of 40 degrees,
the upper wall of the bergschrund will most
likely be quite overhung.
Keep this in mind if you are approaching
a bergschrund from the top. Conversely if
you are approaching the same bergschrund
from below and the angle is still quite
steep, you might be surprised to see that
the lower bergschrund wall seems at a
friendlier angle.
Be very careful with these crevasses.
Quite often they bend into a more plumb
direction farther down. This curved appearance can make crevasse rescues very
tricky.
Crevasses in Stress Zones
These so-called V-shaped crevasses are
generally the most visible ones. The stress
zones are areas where a differential in
gravitational pull occurs. This could be a
rapid change in topography. The classic
feature is a mellow slope changing into a
steeper slope. Gravitational pull accelerates the flow and the brittle crust fractures,
forming the crevasse.
What you should know. Be aware
271
272
Anatomy of a glacier
complex topic and just about any glaciologist will confirm that predicting the location
of crevasses with 100 percent accuracy is
273
Chapter 10
Avalanche
Companion Rescue
Your best protection against dying in an
avalanche is prevention. Use terrain selection and travel techniques (as discussed in
chapter 2) with a healthy dose of caution to
avoid getting caught in the first place.
Trauma is what kills 25 percent of
people buried in an avalanche. Thats one
in fournot very good odds. The remaining fatalities are mainly from asphyxiation.
Figure 10.1 shows the time needed to keep
survival odds reasonable for victims not
killed by trauma.
If you are caught in an avalanche and
not killed by trauma, the best chance you
have for survival is to be rescued by your
companions. In the event of a burial, you
276
100
90
Percentage recovered alive
80
70
60
50
At 35 minutes, survival
rate drops to 37%
40
30
20
10
0
0
15
30
45
60
75
90
105
120
135
150
165
Time in minutes
Source: American Avalanche Association (based on 422 completely buried victims)
277
278
Organization
1. Determine the last seen point.
This is the location to begin the
search. Hopefully, you were using
appropriate travel techniques, were
skiing the suspect slope one at a time,
and had eyes on each skier.
2. Determine a leader. Sometimes
this just happens, and the naturalborn leader in the group takes charge.
Its not a bad idea to figure out who
a leader might be prior to embarking
on your trip, but sometimes you need
to decide on the leader in the field.
Either way, dont waste timefigure
it out quickly.
3. Determine the safety of the
slope before rushing out onto it. A
buried rescuer is not a very effective
rescuer. Look around: could another
avalanche occur? Two big things to
look out for are the presence of hang
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280
10 m
10 m
20 m
Primary search
> 40 m
Objective:
Detect strong
signal
10 m
20 m
Secondary search
403 m
Pinpoint search
<3m
Objective:
Get close to
buried beacon
(approximately
3 m)
Objective:
Locate strongest
signal, minimize
probe/dig area
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282
Multiple-Beacon Search
An avalanche with a buried skier is the
backcountry travelers worst nightmare.
Multiple buried skiers are even worse.
Multiple-beacon searches are exponentially more difficult than a single search for
several reasons. Multiple buried beacons
simultaneously sending out signals confuses even the most experienced beacon
user. To complicate matters, once youve
located the buried person you still need to
extricate him and then move on to the next
person(s)this takes a tremendous amount
of time. Remember, good terrain selection is
the key to not getting caught in an avalanche,
and correctly implementing travel techniques
is the key to not having multiple people caught.
A focus of beacon technology is in reducing the complexity of the multiple signals
that the user must decipher. At present,
many beacons function similarly to each
other in a single search. How to search for
multiple victims differs between manufacturers, as each company uses the technology it thinks will best expedite a search. Each
beacon functions slightly differently in its
multiple search mode, and familiarity with
this mode is fundamental to completing
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Probing Tips
Keep both hands spaced apart on the probe with one hand low and near the
surface of the snow; this will minimize probe breakage.
Use a fair amount of force when probing to penetrate all the layers of the snow;
some layers can be surprisingly dense.
If your probe has incremental marks, note the depth of the buried personthis
depth will come into play for shoveling.
To feel the difference between a dense layer and a buried person, push your probe
against your partner while out practicing with your beacons.
The general rule is to probe down to a depth of 2 meters (6 feet). If the area was
pinpointed using a beacon, probe as deep as necessary to find the skier.
Wear gloves while probing to prevent snow from freezing to the probe.
284
Shoveling Technique
Youre telling yourself, I already know
how to digwhat techniques do I need?
Avalanche debris can weigh up to 400
kilograms per cubic meter. In a typical
burial (1 meter deep) around 3 cubic meters of snow must be moved. If you do the
math, thats 1200 kilograms (a little more
than 1 ton) of snow that needs to be moved
by your power. Youll need to dig like hell.
Many of us focus on the beacon search
when we train for rescue (that is, if we
train at all). But new research on avalanche
burials suggests that taking a methodical approach to shoveling can reduce burial time.
Analysis of avalanche rescues indicates that
most of the total burial time is taken up by
the shoveling part of the rescue, so techniques that expedite shoveling are worth
discussing and practicing. Bruce Edgerly
and Dale Atkinss Strategic Shoveling
paper is an excellent resource for more
information (see Avalanche and Weather
Publications in the appendix).
These are the recommended steps for
a single rescuer in a companion rescue
scenario.
1. Leave the probe in place (as
discussed in Probing, above), and
note the burial depth using the probe
markings.
285
Probe
Dig
Dig
1.5 x bu
rial depth
286
Crevasse Fall:
Self-Rescue
In the event that you fall into a crevasse,
one of the faster ways back up to the
surface is to ascend the rope that youre
hanging on. To safely and successfully selfrescue, you must focus on three tasks: how
to communicate with your rope team, how
to create backup protection against another
fall, and how to ascend the rope.
Communication
Communication between you and those
holding your weight can be very difficult
because snow is such a good sound insulator. At the same time, communication is
vital to prevent further hazard after the
fall has been arrested. The skier up on the
snow surface is responsible for managing
communication. You must be sure that your
partners are expecting you to self-rescue
before you begin to ascend the rope, and
they must be able to tell you when theyve
transferred the load to the anchor and are
ready for you to ascend.
Backup
If you can reach a crevasse wall, you should
create a backup as soon as possible after
your fall. Until you communicate with
your partners, you have no idea if they are
holding you in a good arrest stance in solid
snow a good distance from the edge, or if
they are clawing for purchase on frozen
snow or ice. If you can attach yourself to
the crevasse wall, you provide increased
safety for yourself in the event that they
slip or lose hold.
The fastest way to build a backup is to
place an ice screw near shoulder height in
the crevasse wall and clip in to it. Remember that slings are static, so it is very
important that the connection between
your harness and the ice screw has minimal slack in it to prevent injury in case of
dynamic loading. Use a sling and clip in to
your harness directly; and tie an overhand
knot to adjust the length and keep slack out
of the sling.
The ice screw provides a backup as
long as you remain below it; once you
begin ascending out of the crevasse (or are
hauled out), then you must remove it. Until
then, however, it is best to keep yourself
clipped in until you and your partners have
communicated.
In the worst case, where you are unable
287
to communicate before you begin ascending, it is possible to place ice screws in the
crevasse wall above you as you ascend.
Doing so requires having two or more ice
screws so that you can always be clipped in
to one.
Preparation
Once you have communicated with your
partners, decided to self-rescue, and backed
yourself up, its time to rig to climb the rope.
The first thing you need to do is get your
skis off your feet and connect them to your
body. Hopefully, you have ski straps on
because youre traveling on a glacier; this
means that getting your feet free is just a
matter of releasing your bindings.
If you dont have ski straps, or if you
want to hang your skis from your harness,
make sure you clip your skis in to something before taking them off. The last thing
you want to do is drop a ski in the crevasse!
Hanging them on the back of your harness
is a good way to keep them out of the way
while you ascend.
If you have a heavy pack on you may
want to consider removing it before you
ascend. If you decide to remove your pack,
you will attach it to the rope with a friction
hitch and haul it up behind you.
Make sure to rig your hanging system and
clip the pack in before you take it off your
back. To put the weight of the pack on the
rope, tie a long cordelette to the rope with a
friction hitch. Clip a load bearing strap of the
pack (not just a small strap that could rip) to
the long loop of the cordelette, and lower the
pack until its hanging below you.
Ascending
There are many options in deciding how
to ascend the rope. Your goal is to choose
the quickest and safest method, and your
choice of technique will be largely dictated
by the gear you have on your harness. This
means you should consider your self-rescue
plan when deciding what gear to put on
your harness for glacier travel.
Tip: Develop and practice your self-rescue
system before you go into the mountains,
and plan the gear on your harness
accordingly.
An ascension system has three requirements: the waist loop, the leg loop (or
loops), and the backup. (These loops are
also called waist and leg prusiks, after the
commonly used friction hitch.) You can ascend using these loops and friction hitches,
or you can use a combination of the leg
loop and some type of autolocking device in
place of the waist loop. We will focus on a
system that is simple to rig and that requires
no special gear. Climbing and Mountaineering in the appendix lists resources for more
information on various systems.
Ascending with Friction Hitches
The basic concept here is to attach two
cordelettes or slings to the rope using friction hitches, resulting in a waist loop above
a single leg loop.
1. For the waist loop, rig one friction
hitch with a shorter cordelette or
sling, and clip it through your harness
with a locking carabiner (at the same
288
Waist
loop
Leg
loop
Overhand
knot in leg
loop, and
locker
clipped in to
it for backup
Fig. 10.5 Waist loop and leg loop setup for self
rescue
289
How to Ascend
Once you are rigged and backed up, you
will be inch-worming your way up the rope
as follows:
1. Stand in the leg loop, letting it hold
your weight, and slide the waist loop
as high as you can up the rope (fig.
10.8). Hold on to the rope for balance, and brace your foot against the
crevasse wall if you can reach it.
2. Sit down in the waist loop. This takes
your weight off of the leg loop and
allows you to slide the leg loop up the
rope to meet the waist loop (fig. 10.9).
290
crevasse rescue
Arresting a fall on skis gives you the advantage of extra surface area for holding power.
On the other hand, if you get pulled headfirst toward the load, it can be harder to
bring your skis around beneath you to hold
the fall. You must position your skis and
your body to hold the weight of a person
while you dig an anchor.
The strongest position to hold a fall
is with your edges perpendicular to the
direction of pull. You should be positioned
such that the pulling force and the rope are
oriented in the same direction as your body
(fig. 10.10).
Crevasse Rescue
We describe crevasse rescue in five components: arresting the fall, building the
anchor, transferring the load to the anchor,
checking on the person in the crevasse,
and building a haul system. This progression assumes the rescuer is wearing rope
in a Kiwi coil (or that its in her pack) and
is in glacier-travel mode, prerigged with a
cordelette/friction hitch on the rope. What
follows assumes the worst-case scenario:
that you are solely responsible for rescuing
your friend in the crevasse. Where applicable, we refer to other methods you can
use if you have more people available. For
291
292
crevasse rescue
Fig. 10.12 Use ice ax to dig a T-anchor. Note the location of the slot around shoulder height.
293
294
crevasse rescue
Anchor
Locking
carabiner
attaches load
transfer cord
to anchor
(step 1)
Rope clovehitched to
anchor as
backup to the
load-transfer
cordelette
(step 3)
Prerig used
as loadtransfer
cordelette
Load
Fig. 10.14 Load transfer complete with clove
hitch in the rope for backup
Take a deep breath. You have just accomplished the most critical steps of crevasse
rescue: you stopped the fall, you built an
295
296
crevasse rescue
297
Load line
Rope moves
this way only;
garda locks
when the
load line is
weighted
298
crevasse rescue
299
for haul
Backup
Clipped to harness
with cows tail
300
Load line
(fallen skier)
Autoblock
301
D
E
A
C
Anchor
B
Fallen
skier
Load line
302
crevasse rescue
C
A
303
304
B
C of the added 2:1
C
A , B ,C
305
1 unit
2 units
C
3 units
6 units on
locker at fallen
skiers harness
Fig. 10.23 Counting mechanical advantage for drop loop 6:1 haul system
306
emergency shelters
the cordelette/carabiner (A from step 3). That brings the units of force applied to
the rope below the hitch to 3.
6. Now follow the rope down into the crevasse until it goes through the locking
carabiner on the skiers harness. The rope has 3 units going down to the biner, and
3 coming up toward the anchor. That means that the skier clipped in to the locker is
experiencing 6 units of force. Voila 6:1 system.
Note: This method of counting mechanical advantage gives us the hauling ratio as it
would be in a frictionless world. In the real world of carabiners, dynamic ropes, and other
hauling efficiency losses, you can expect a lower ratio to be applied to the load.
Emergency Shelters
The decision to use an emergency shelter
can be boiled down to one question: in
order to deal with your situation, is it better
to move toward safety or to stay put? The
factors you have to consider in this decision
can include the following:
What is the nature of the emergency?
This can range from a time/location
problem (its getting dark and/or youre
lost) to a serious injury or accident.
How far from help and safety are you?
What are the conditions you are experiencing? This includes weather, terrain,
snowpack, and time of day.
What emergency equipment do you
have with you?
What hazards will be created by moving?
What hazards will be created by staying
where you are?
What other special considerations do
you have in the situation?
As in any decision-making in the backcountry, there are no hard and fast rules
about when to build a shelter. Instead,
always have shelter as an option for dealing
How to Build an
Emergency Shelter
There are countless ways to create shelter in
the winter backcountry environmentbuild
an igloo (or digloo), pitch a tent, create a snow
cave (all discussed in chapter 8). However,
creating an emergency shelter is different than
creating a backcountry shelter, and there are a
different set of criteria to guide you.
Time matters. Your goal is to create effective shelter as quickly as possible.
Equipment available. Your shelter
must keep its inhabitants as warm as possible, and often you will need to do this
without the luxury of overnight gear (tent,
sleeping pad, sleeping bag).
Goal of the shelter. Are you digging a
shelter to get an injured skier out of a storm
for part of a day, or are you digging shelter
for three people to spend the night without
sleeping bags?
Consequences of building the shelter. Can you build a shelter without getting
soaked to the bone? Can you get warm
307
The Trench/Emergency
Bivy Shelter
There are many ways you can meet the
above criteria in any given situation. Here
we describe one way of creating a snow
shelter that is fast and effective. Snow is an
easily sculptable material and it has amazing insulative qualities. A good snow shelter
will shield you from cold temperatures,
wind, and generally tough winter conditions that might make it hard to survive an
unplanned night out. A snow cave can also
be used as an emergency shelterit can
take longer to create than a trench shelter,
but requires no gear other than a shovel
(see Snow Shelters in chapter 8).
For the following trench shelter we
assume you have the basic gear for a day
tour: skis, poles, and shovel. This shelter is
a trench dug in the snow, with the bottom
of the trench wider than the top. The roof
of the shelter is then created by laying skis
and poles across the top of the trench and
creating a roof of snow on the skis and
poles (figs. 10.2410.27).
1. Begin by digging a narrow trench
in the snow, about as wide as your
body. Dig until the trench is at least
up to your ribsyou can go deeper
308
Snow surface
6 feet
23 feet
Bell shape
Snow or tarp
and snow
309
310
emergency sleds
Emergency Sleds
At its most basic, the decision to build a
sled is a decision to move toward safety
rather than to stay put and wait for rescue,
daylight, or a break in the weather. Moving
someone in a rescue sled is difficult, exhausting, and slow work. Building a rescue
sled in any terrainsteep or benignis
something of a last resort, when rescue by
mechanized means is not possible and the
injured skier cant move himself to safety.
Deciding to build an emergency sled
includes the same considerations used in
deciding to build an emergency shelter, but
with added concerns. In addition to the considerations of time, equipment available,
goals of creating a sled, and consequences
of building a sled, you will have another
very important consideration: terrain. On
skis, the location of an injured skier may
well be in steep and technical terrain, or
you may be deep in the wilderness with
long distances to safety. In deciding to build
a sled to execute a rescue you will be asking
yourself these general questions:
What is the distance you must travel?
Are there periods of sidehill traversing,
or can you get to safety moving down
the fall line or over flat ground?
What are the snow conditionsdeep
powder or hardpack?
Are you in steep or technical terrain that
will require anchoring and lowering the
sled once it is built?
How to Build an
Emergency Sled
The form and nature of your emergency
sled will be dictated by the following considerations:
Materials. What do you have available
to you? Do you have a manufactured rescue
sled? Do you have skis with holes in their
tips (and/or tails)? Do you have the equipment to build an improvised sled? As we
describe below, you can build a decent sled
using skis (with holes), rubber ski straps,
adjustable poles, several cordelettes and
carabiners, and a bivy tarp.
Durability. The forces trying to pull
your sled apart will be powerful and acting
in many directions. Your sled must be durable enough to stay together as the system
is loaded, wrenched, and shoved down
steep inclines and through deep snowall
with a full-sized human strapped to it. Your
sled must have reinforcement built into
it in tensile, compressive, and torsional
axes. You wont know if your rescue sled
will stand up to these forces until you have
practiced building and using it.
Nature of injury. Its one thing to
strap a healthy, sound individual into a
rescue sled while practicing; its another
experience altogether trying to secure an
injured person in a sled. You must take into
consideration the most comfortable position
for the injured person, and this may not
always be lying on their back with hands
folded. What if the injured person will only
lie on his side? Can you interface splinting with the sled? If you are worried about
severe bleeding, either internal or external,
311
No matter how tight you pull the adjustment straps, the sled will most likely come
apart when you strap someone into it. To
prevent this, you can add torsional and longitudinal reinforcement as follows (fig. 10.31):
312
Crossbraces
for tips
and tails
Sled body
Fig. 10.28 Components for a manufactured sled. Note the additional gear for reinforcing the sled.
314
emergency sleds
315
Lowering a Sled
In some situations the terrain might be
steep or exposed enough that you must
build an anchor and lower the injured skier
in the rescue sled. We discuss building
anchors in Chapter 6, Ski Mountaineering
Techniques. Additional considerations in
lowering a sled follow:
Secure your start platform. Make
sure that you can safely build a sled and
safely strap the injured skier into the sled.
This can be as simple as staging the sled in
flat ground or as complicated as digging or
chopping out a platform to work on.
Avoid shock-loading the anchor. This
is particularly important as you transition
from flat ground to weighting the anchor.
Set the anchor and master point high
enough above the platform so that the rope
is almost tight to the sled before you weight
the anchor.
Tie in to the harness and the sled.
This is crucial: the load-bearing tie-in point
needs to be attached to the sled, but you
also need to tie the person in through his
harness. Figure 10.34 shows a good configuration for this dual tie-in system.
316
first-aid kits
2 tie-in points
First-Aid Kits
A first-aid kit for ski tours will ideally contain everything you need for dealing with
injury or emergency in the mountains. The
difficulty arises in creating a kit that will be
effective and appropriate, both in content
and in size and weight. Before you build
up your first-aid kit we highly recommend
taking a first-aid course with a wilderness
focus (see Wilderness First Aid in the appendix). This will give you a realistic feel
for what can and cant be accomplished in
wilderness first aid, and how wilderness
emergencies are dealt with.
The following are some questions and
their implications to guide you in building
your first-aid kit.
317
318
Allergy kit
Splint kitextensive
Expedition kit
Comfort kit
Blister kit
Sample Multiday
First-Aid Kit
Personal safety kit
Trauma kitmultiday
319
Repair Kits
Having a good repair kit can easily mean
the difference between accomplishing the
objectives of a trip and getting stuck going
nowhere at all when you have gear failure. An ideal repair kit has many useful
components, most of which have more than
one use, but is still as compact and light as
possible. That said, all repair kits are not
created equal, and you should tailor your
repair kit to your expectations for the trips
length, commitment level, and potential
for wear and tear on your gear (figs. 10.37
and 10.38).
320
Emergency
Communication
Equipment
Communications are a crucial part of a rescue plan and are key to emergency procedures. There are a variety of ways to provide
communications for emergency purposes,
each suited to different parameters.
Cell Phones
Cell phones are the most widely carried
way to call for help from the backcountry.
If you are considering your cell phone as
a means of calling for rescue, you should
know a few important things about cell
phone technology.
All phones are not created equal. There
is significant variation among the cell
phones available in Europe, Canada, and
the United States. Differences involve the
networks the phones can access and the
frequency band those networks use. When
using your cell phone as emergency rescue
equipment, you want it to be able to access
as many networks as possible in the regions
where you travel.
The language describing phone function
can be confusing. Here is what you need
to know in order to purchase a mountainfriendly phone:
321
Satellite Phones
Satellite phones work on similar principles
as cell phones, but with network support via satellite instead of via cell phone
tower. There are two basic types of satellite
phones: geostationary and low earth orbit.
Geostationary satellites are far away (about
22,000 miles), whereas low earth orbit satellites are much closer (400700 miles). As
communication for mountain rescue, satellite phones are most often used in cases
where cell phone coverage and help from
radio communications are both unavailable.
Pros. You can make calls from all over
the world, and you can access the landbased and mobile phone systems in any
country using a satellite phone.
Cons. Satellite phones are expensive
to purchase and can be expensive to use.
Coverage can vary depending on the type
of network and location.
As with any technology, satellite phones
are constantly evolving. If you are thinking
of using one for your emergency communication device in the mountains, research
the latest technologies and phones available
before you make a purchase.
UHF/VHF Radios
This subject could fill an entire book. The
types of radios available are described by
the frequency bands on which they can
transmit and receive. UHF/VHF (ultra
high frequency and very high frequency)
322
Personal Locater
Beacons (PLB)
When activated, a PLB will send out an
emergency signal. Organizations like NOAA
monitor the frequencies of the beacon and
use them to locate and rescue the people
who set off the PLB. PLBs transmit two
frequencies: one of the frequencies is used
to locate you within a few miles, while the
other allows a ground team to find you
within closer range. Some PLBs now have
GPS capabilities built into them.
Pros. PLBs work very well for organized
rescue and require very little training to use.
Cons. PLBs are more expensive than cell
phones, radios, and some satellite phones
(you can rent them, however). You must be
in a country with enough of a rescue infrastructure for them to be effective.
323
Resources Appendix
Avalanche Centers
us and canada
Avalanche.org
Alaska
Chugach National Forest Avalanche Information Center, www.fs.fed.us/r10
/chugach/glacier/snow.html
Southeast Alaska Avalanche Center,
www.avalanche.org/~seaac
California
Eastern Sierra Avalanche Center (ESAC),
www.esavalanche.org
Mount Shasta Avalanche Center and Wilderness Department (MSAC),
www.shastaavalanche.org
Sierra Avalanche Center (SAC),
www.sierraavalanchecenter.org
Colorado
Colorado Avalanche Information Center
(CAIC), http://avalanche.state.co.us
Idaho
Panhandle National Forest Avalanche
Center, www.fs.fed.us/ipnf/visit
/conditions/backcountry/index.html
Payette Avalanche Center,
www.payetteavalanche.org
Sawtooth National Forest Avalanche
Center, www.avalanche.org/~svavctr
Montana
Gallatin National Forest Avalanche
Center, www.mtavalanche.com
Glacier Country Avalanche Center,
www.glacieravalanche.org
West Central Montana Avalanche
Foundation, www.missoulaavalanche.org
324
New Hampshire
Mount Washington Avalanche Center,
www.tuckerman.org
Oregon
Northwest Weather and Avalanche Center
(NWAC), www.nwac.us
Avalanche
Organizations
American Avalanche Association (AAA),
www.americanavalancheassociation.org
American Institute for Avalanche
Research and Education (AIARE),
www.avtraining.org
Utah
Utah Avalanche Center,
www.avalanche.org/~uac
Washington
Northwest Weather and Avalanche Center
(NWAC), www.nwac.us
Wyoming
Bridger-Teton National Forest Backcountry Avalanche Hazard and Weather
Forecast, www.jhavalanche.org
Canada
Canadian Avalanche Association (CAA),
www.avalanche.ca
Europe
Chamonix Avalanche Information,
www.ohm-chamonix.com
/fiche.php?id=00&ling=En
European Avalanche Services,
www.slf.ch/laworg/map.html
French Avalanche Service,
www.meteo.fr/meteonet/temps/activite
/mont/france_bna.htm
Swiss Federal Institute for Snow and
Avalanche Research,
www.slf.ch/welcome-en.html
Avalanche and
Weather Publications
The Avalanche Handbook, 3rd edition, by
David McClung and Peter Schaerer,
The Mountaineers Books, 2006.
The Avalanche Review, American
Avalanche Association,
www.americanavalancheassociation
.org/publications.html.
Avalanche Safety for Skiers and Climbers,
2nd edition, by Tony Daffern,
The Mountaineers Books, 2000.
Beacon Searches with the Three Circle
Method, by Chris Semmel and Dieter
Stopper, DAV Panorama (January 2004).
Field Experiments on the Effectiveness
of Some New Avalanche Equipment,
by Martin Kern, Frank Tschirky, and
Jrg. Schweizer, www.slf.ch/staff
/pers-home/kern/kern-de.html.
Heuristic Traps in Recreational Avalanche Accidents: Evidence and Implications, by Ian McCammon, The Avalanche Review 22, nos. 2 and 3 (2004).
Living Ice: Understanding Glaciers and
Glaciation, by Robert Sharp, Cambridge
University Press, 1991.
325
resources appendix
Climbing and
Mountaineering
Alpine Climbing: Techniques to Take You
Higher, by Mark Houston and Kathy
Cosley, The Mountaineers Books, 2004.
technical
specifications and
mechanics of climbing
International Testing Standards for
Climbing Gear, www.uiaa.ch
Technical Explanations of the
Mechanics of Climbing,
www.en.petzl.com
326
other organizations
Navigation
GPS Made Easy, 4th edition,
by Lawrence Letham, The Mountaineers Books, 2003.
Wilderness Navigation, 2nd edition,
by Bob Burns and Mike Burns,
The Mountaineers Books, 2004.
emergency
phone numbers
Emergency Call Numbers:
USA
911
Canada
911
Europe
112
Alpine Emergencies/Search
and Rescue:
Germany
19222
Switzerland
1414
Austria
140
Italy
118
Other Organizations
Alpine Club (AC), www.alpine-club.org.uk
American Alpine Club (AAC),
www.americanalpineclub.org
American Mountain Guides Association
(AMGA), www.amga.com
Association of Canadian Mountain Guides
(ACMG), www.acmg.ca
International Federation of Mountain
Guides Association (IFMGA),
www.ivbv.info/
327
Glossary
328
glossary
329
glossary
330
glossary
331
glossary
332
glossary
333
glossary
334
glossary
335
Index
organizations, 325
path, 99
point release. See loose snow
probes, 71
shovels, 74-75
size classifications, 90
slab, 8890
stauchwall of, 89
survival statistics, 277
terrain, 98-99
what to do in one, 278
avalanche probe
lengths,72
locking mechanism, 73
ski probe poles, 71
backcountry gear and skiing
techniques, 23841
backcountry gear versus alpine
gear, 236
backcountry skis, 22
backing, skin, 39,40
backpack explosion, 180
backup
for load transfer cordalette,
294
for self rescue in a crevasse,
287
bacteria inhibitor, 55
base layers, 57
beacon search. See also companion rescue
multiple burial 28384
single burial, 28183
three circle method, 284
bedrock lubrication, 270
belayed climbing, 229
belayed skiing, tie-in method, 244
bergschrund, 267, 268, 271
bivy bags, 250
bollards
ice, 211
snow, 199201
boot/binding application, 23
boot and binding compatibility, 27
boot cuff, 22
boot/crampon connection, 224
braided outwash stream, 268
breathability, 54
butterfly coiling technique, 230
caloric economy, 20
caloric efficiency, 21
camming devices. See cams
cams, 204
cell phones for the mountains,
32122
cheat sheet, 41
Christiania, 16
climbing and mountaineering
resources, 326
cold front, 264
cold trap, 252
companion rescue, 27887
compass tips for navigating on
skis, 133
compression zone, 269
conduction. 59, 249
continental snowpack, 97
contour-tangent method, 136
convection, 59, 249
corn snow, 92
creep, 92
crevasse fall
communication during, 287
self rescue, 287-91
crevasse formation, 270
crevasse rescue, 291307
arresting a fall, 29192
building an anchor for, 29293
hauling system. See hauling
systems
preparing the lip, 29596
rappelling into the crevasse,
29597
336
index
I-anchor, 19798
ice screws, 207
placement of, 20809
icefall, 267, 269, 272
incline, 100
indirect crevasse fall hazard, 223,
232
insulating capacity, 55
intended application, 23, 25
intermountain snowpack, 97
kick turns, 14960
downhill-facing, 15960
downhill-initiated, 15658
tips for steep terrain, 16061
troubleshooting, 155
Kiwi coil, 221, 229
lateral moraine, 268
Leave No Trace, 25657
lift-assisted backcountry
skiing, 237
lift-assisted skiing, 39
likelihood and consequence, 227
load line, 297
long term adaptation, 264
lower density air, 263
marginal crevasses, 268, 272
maritime snowpack, 97
mechanical advantage, 29798,
30607
medial moraine, 268
membrane, 53
merino wool, 56
metal toe bail, 224
metamorphism
direct weather effects, 91
indirect weather effects, 93
melt-freeze, 92
midlayers, 57
millibar, 263
moat, 227, 267, 268
moderate crux, 228
mohair skins, 39, 40
Montana Sport of Switzerland, 40
moraine, 267
moraine lake, 268
mountain environment, 262
mountain ethics, 25658
mountain weather basics, 262
337
index
platform, 23
plotting a bearing on a map, 133
plush, 39
pocket glacier, 269
point-to-point navigation, 135
predictability, 28
prerigging for glacier travel, 222
Primaloft, 55
primary search, 28082
principle of equalization, 54
probing
spot, 285
technique, 28485
protection
ice, 20711
in ski mountaineering, 193
rock anchors, 20306
snow anchors, 195201
PTFE polytetrafluoroethylene,
53
qualitative assessment, 20
radiation, 59
rappelling
accidents, 229
with skis, 229, 231
without a harness, 231
ratchet, 297
recuperation time, 21
red flag values, 125
relative humidity, 54
repair kits, 32021
rescue coordination, 279
rescue sled. See also emergency
sled
construction, skis for, 28
resection, 134
respiration, 59, 249
respiratory volume, 264
ridge crest, 232
rock horn, 227
roped uphill travel
with skis, 221
without skis, 222
ropes
dry treatment, 66
middle marker, 66
single, half and twin, 63, 64
static, 65
rounding, 94
safety efficiency speed, 180
satellite phones, 322
saturation point, 54
seal skins, 39
seated belay, 21216
in snow, skis on and off,
21416
limits and benefits of, 217
on rock, 216
with a Munter hitch, 213
secondary search, 282
self rescue. See crevasse fall self
rescue
seracs, 272
short pitching, 227, 228
short roping, 225
with terrain features, 227
without terrain features, 225
short term adaptation, 264
shoveling techniques, 28586
side cut, 23, 24
ski crampons, 38, 16667
ski engineering properties, 25
ski length, 25
ski mountaineering, 11,12, 180
harness, 53
history, 14,15
summits, 192
techniques, 192
ski touring 11, 12, 180
day packs, 60
ski utility, 28
skifahren, definition, 39
skiing on belay, 24245
skilaufen, definition, 39
skin
glue, 41
how to cut, 42
life cycle of, 40
recommendations, 41
skinning
body position, 141
in difficult conditions,16166
in frozen conditions, 16367
techniques,14047
slope angle. See incline
338
index
tail notches, 28
taking a bearing in the field, on a
map, 133
technical specifications for gear,
326
telemark
bindings, 17
Norway,15
skis, 22
temperature, 265
temperature inversion, 264
tents, 250, 308
terminal moraine, 268
terminus, 268
terrain belays
rock, 20607
snow, 20102
terrain traps, 104
Texas kick, 221
threesome packing helper, 78
thermal comfort equilibrium, 249
THINX anchors, 19599
time calculations for tour planning,11013
tip and tail holes, 28
tip loop, 44
topo map tips for navigating on
skis, 133
topo maps
for tour planning, 10809
for whiteout navigation,109
tour planning, 84, 10615
and the human factor, 11314
with a computer, 109
track setting, 16777
and efficiency, 170
and safety, 169
and speed, 172
techniques, 17375
troubleshooting, 177
training resources, 327
transceiver
avalanche, 66
batteries for, 69
digital and analog, 67
function check, 6970
range check, 71
transitions
and efficiency, 182
and speed, 183
from skiing to skinning, 183
from skinning to booting, 185
from skinning to skiing, 183
from snow to glaciated
terrain, 187
from unroped to roped
travel, 188
trench/emergency shelter, 309
trigger points, 10405
twin tip skis, 23
UHF/VHF radios, 32223
uphill travel
on ice, 224
on rock, 223, 224
valley glacier, 270
vapor transport mechanism, 54,
55
V-shaped crevasses, 271
V-thread, 210
walk mode, 22
warm front, 264
watercolumn test, 53
waterproof coatings, 54
waterproofness versus breathability, 53
wax paper, 44
weak layers, 9496
weather drivers, 262
weather history and forecasts,
107, 32425
weather observations, 121
wedge turn, 239
Werner Munter time calculation
method, 11013
whiteout
navigation, 109, 13636
skiing, 136
wilderness first aid resources, 327
wind chill
calculations, 265
temperature chart,266
X-anchor, 199
339
Scott Schell is a certified AMGA Ski Mountaineering Guide and has guided extensively throughout the
United States, including Alaska, as well as in Canada
and Europe. An avid ski mountaineer, Scott has
been involved in avalanche and guiding education
as an instructor and trainer for AIARE and a former
AMGA ski discipline instructor. As the former manager of Pro Ski Service in Seattle, he saw the need
for a ski mountaineering book that would provide
a comprehensive source for the backcountry skier.
While toting his cameras throughout North America
and Europe, Scott has captured many memorable
and compelling images through the trained eye
of both a photographer and mountain guide. To
learn more about Scotts work, please visit www
.schellphoto.com. Scotts passion for ski mountaineering, alpine climbing and the outdoors is only
surpassed by his affection for his longtime partner,
Margaret.
Margaret Wheeler is a ski, alpine, and rock climbing guide who has led trips throughout Europe and
North America. An active member of the guiding
community, she is an instructor of guide training for
the AMGA and serves on its board of directors. She
is involved in avalanche education through her work
as an AIARE instructor and trainer. In the development of her ski mountaineering career, Margaret
has been a member of several womens expeditions
pioneering first ski descents in India and the Altai
mountains of Mongolia. In 2006, she became the
second woman in the United States to complete her
IFMGA/UIAGM certification. She holds a bachelors
degree in history from Dartmouth College and a
masters in mechanical engineering from University
of Washington. When shes not in the mountains,
Margaret works part-time for a Seattle-based engineering firm, and lives in Snoqualmie, Washington,
with her long-time squeeze, Scott.
HOW-TO/SKIING
$21.95 U.S.
n
Intermediate-to-advanced techniques for ski touring and ski mountaineering
n
Skills for mastering uphill travel
n
Primers on mountain weather and avalanche safety
n
Professional advice on selecting gear, troubleshooting, and adapting to varying conditions
n
Information on constructing emergency shelters and sleds
n
Tips for wilderness trip planning and navigation
A native of Switzerland, Martin Volken is one of only three officially certified Swiss Guides working in the
U.S. today. He is also an instructor and examiner for the American Mountain Guides Associations (AMGA)
elite certification, and founder of Pro Guiding Services. Coauthor Scott Schell is a certified AMGA Ski
Mountaineering Guide and has led numerous single- and multi-day trips in the Cascades, British Columbias
Coast Range, and the Alps. Coauthor Margaret Wheeler started guiding for Pro Guiding Service in 2002,
becoming a certified AMGA Ski Mountaineering Guide shortly after. In 2006 she became the second woman
in the U.S. to complete her IFMGA/UIAGM certification.
|xHSLFTEy850387zv;:#:":^:&
Property of Lucas Foxton, lucas.foxton@foxton.net.au
ISBN 978-1-59485-038-7
BACKCOUNTRY SKIING
MOUNTAINEERS
series
OUTDOOR EXPERT
MOUNTAINEERS
OUTDOOR EXPERT
s e r i e s
BACKCOUNTRY SKIING
Skills for Ski Touring and
Ski Mountaineering
Martin Volken, Scott Schell,
and Margaret Wheeler