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Snowmobile Avalanche Fatalities Winter 2018-19

christopher

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<section class="banner cf lr">
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</section> <header class="secondary"> U.S. Motorized Avalanche Fatalities Winter 2018-19
https://www.snowest.com/2019/07/us-...cTsdhp_UaWWTovKf6NzjlDdP0XKmMfzm0YdefvWoxe8wE

July 2019 Feature Mike Duffy, Avalanche1.com
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It was an interesting year for snowmobile avalanche fatalities in the U.S. It’s as if we stepped back 20 plus years to when snowmobile fatalities involved the lack of avalanche rescue gear.


The fatalities last year had an inordinate number of unprepared riders. Not what we expected to see with record number of riders attending advanced classes and buying gear. The opportunities exist for motorized specific courses. Like other user groups, avalanche knowledge and preparedness varies tremendously. Many riders have chosen not to be educated or properly equipped.


Total U.S. Avalanche Fatalities: 25

  • U.S. Snowbike fatalities: 0
  • U.S. Snowmobile avalanche fatalities: 8
Breakdown Of U.S. Snowmobile Avalanche Fatalities 2018/19

  • 32 percent of the total U.S. avalanche fatalities were snowmobilers.
  • Snowmobile fatalities by state: UT-3, WY-3, MT-1, ID-1.
  • All victims were single complete burials.
  • 63 percent of the snowmobilers killed did not have a transceiver.
  • Riding partners all not fully equipped with transceiver, shovel and probe in 63 percent of the accidents.
  • 63 percent of the victims were dug out by people outside the riding group.
  • Digging to the victim varied from 6 minutes to the next day. Majority were not timely.
  • Midwest riders accounted for 25 percent of the snowmobile fatalities, while western riders were 75 percent.
  • 100 percent of the accidents were triggered by riders in the group.
  • 100 percent of the fatal avalanches failed on a persistent weak layer.
  • 63 percent of the accidents had riders in the runout zone.
  • Multiple people on the slope only occurred in one fatality.
  • 38 percent of the accidents involved a potential searcher getting caught in the avalanche which delayed the rescue.
  • 25 percent of the victims had deployed an airbag.
  • Almost, if not all, of the riders lacked advanced avalanche training.
There’s room for improvement with many riding groups. It appears most victims died from asphyxiation, but that’s inconclusive without coroner’s reports. These snowmobile statistics are a definite contrast to winter 2017/18 when 18 percent of the victims did not have transceivers and 50 percent died from trauma.



 

Scott

Scott Stiegler
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I just read that article.
Very interesting.

Seems like 63% is a very pervasive statistic in this article.
I can't help but wonder if it's the same scene across the board in each of those avys.
 

christopher

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Rigby, Idaho
I just read that article.
Very interesting.

Seems like 63% is a very pervasive statistic in this article.
I can't help but wonder if it's the same scene across the board in each of those avys.


that was my guess as well.
 

Big10inch

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On the positive side, not a single avy fatality in Colorado despite the fact that is was one of the most dangerous avy prone seasons I have seen in 20 years. August in 2 days and there is still so much avy debris in the mountains that roads normally opened in late April are still buried in 30+ feet of snow.
 

Scott

Scott Stiegler
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On the positive side, not a single avy fatality in Colorado despite the fact that is was one of the most dangerous avy prone seasons I have seen in 20 years. August in 2 days and there is still so much avy debris in the mountains that roads normally opened in late April are still buried in 30+ feet of snow.

VERY GOOD POINT!!!!!

CONGRATS to the Colorado sledders!!!!
 
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