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Good beacon practice idea

J

James T Kirk

Well-known member
Check this out, copied from a ski/snowboard forum. Good way to simulate realistic rescue scenarios.

Nerfball: an avalanche transceiver practice method.

By: Halsted Morris

While teaching avalanche safety courses for the Colorado Avalanche Information Center (CAIC), one of the many things I always emphasized was that folks need to practice a lot with their avalanche rescue transceivers. Checking around the Internet, you’ll see on many forums that the general public seems to believe that if they’re using a digital transceiver that they don’t need to practice as much.

The truth is practice builds skills, and limited practice means no skills in a critical situation. Getting folks to practice with their transceivers has always been tough, especially if they are alone. What good is it to practice transceiver searches, if you are doing the hiding and the finding? Obviously doing solo transceiver practice isn’t very realistic.

Backcountry Access (BCA) has donated Beacon Basins, at various ski areas for folks to practice with their transceivers. They are basically a power box with on-off switches that are hard wired to fixed in place transmitters. At first I thought that these Beacon Basins are a great learning tool. But, what I have found is that they are not very realistic.

I say this because when folks are using a Beacon Basins it does not realistically represent what a real avalanche rescue transceiver search is like. My example of this, is when someone switches on the Beacon Basins they are already standing well within signal reception range of the victim. Now how many times do you think that happens in real life?

So, folks don’t get a lesson in doing a larger area search and, trying to find the victim’s signal. With the shorter reception range on many digital transceivers it is critically important to conduct a proper initial search (i.e. how big and wide your zigzag search patterns are). I have also found that with Beacon Basins, once folks have found the buried transceivers the first time, they never really go back and use the Beacon Basin again. If they do, it really isn’t much of a practice session since they already know roughly where the buried transceivers are any way.

Ideally, it would be great to have a different and realistic transceiver search practice session each time. So, I got to thinking that it would be great to simply throw a transmitting transceiver over your shoulder, in order to hide the victim for solo transceiver practice. But, as tough as most transceivers are, it’s not recommended to be throwing them around. Finding away to pad a transceiver would be the way to make this solo transceiver practice possible. The solution to this problem arrived to me one day while shopping at Target. Target and King Soopers sell a small nine-inch Nerf football, for less then $10 in their toy department. A Nerfball is made of soft foam, suitable for indoor play. The nine-inch Nerf football is ideal for padding an avalanche transceiver. Here is how to make your own Nerfball transceiver practice ball.

Cut the football in half lengthwise, and then trace the outline of the transceiver you want to use with a marker. Then pinch the foam to rip it out. Do this until you make a form-fitting pocket for the transceiver. Then place the transmitting transceiver inside the pocket and use several large rubber bands to close the ball. But remember, make sure the transceiver is on transmit and working, before you secure the two half’s back together. Then place the Nerfball inside a small stuff sack. Now you’re ready to use the Nerfball.

A tear in my shoulder has left me lacking a John Elway strength arm for throwing Nerfball. But, I have found that tossing the Nerfball over my shoulder down a steep slope helps the ball travel further away. I have also found that doing transceiver practice on a forested slope with plenty of undergrowth makes for better (i.e., more complicated) practice. Once you’ve thrown the Nerfball remain looking uphill and allow the ball a minute to “pinball” down the slope and to finally come to rest. So far, my old Pipes 457 transceiver has survived 250+ “huckings” inside the Nerfball.

Essentially with the Nerfball transmitter you’re doing a transceiver search without the victim’s last seen area to start from. This is usually the most difficult sort of transceiver search for most folks, other then a multiple burial type situation. My thinking is that practicing the most difficult type of searches should improve one’s transceiver skills the most.

Just like an on-snow search, you need to first acquire the victim’s transmitting transceivers signal. Since you don’t know the slidepath boundaries in doing a dry land solo transceiver practice, figure your slidepath to be at least 150’ wide (75 feet to either side of the spot you where standing when you threw the Nerfball). Once you have picked up the victim’s signal, you can then start to use your preferred search method (fluxline/tangent method or the older grid method).

Once you’re closing in on the victim, you may actual see the Nerfball. I see this as the only drawback to the Nerfball practice method. But, you can complete your search and practice your final pinpoint search just above the Nerfball transmitter, even while it is visible and sitting on the ground. A camouflage pattern stuff sack is one way to make the Nerfball even less obvious, until you’re almost on top of it.

Placing the Nerfball in a short white plastic trash bag can add to the camouflaging of the hidden transmitter for on-snow searches. I have found that doing Nerfball searches on steeper ski resort slopes can be very realistic too. Pick a slope that has plenty of bumps and benches on it. Toss the ball and wait. Then it becomes a matter of doing your zigzags back and forth across the slope. You’ll suddenly find you have to ski/board over bumps (i.e. avalanche debris) while at the same time working with your transceiver. This is much more realistic then doing a search on flat terrain in a Beacon Basin.

My objective here is to get you out and doing a lot of transceiver searches. If you have a big enough slope, they can get four or five practice searches in before hiking back up the hill to start all over again (gee, getting a workout in while doing transceiver practice); or making another lap at a ski area. So, there’s no reason to forgo doing transceiver practice just because you don’t have a partner or time.

A number of folks still have their older duel frequency transceivers (Ortovox F2, Arva 4000 and Ramer Avalert Duel) or older 457 Hz analog transceivers (Pieps 457 Ortovox F1) in the back of their equipment closets. And, there are a number of used older transceivers for sale out there that can be picked up at minimal cost. Camo stuff sacks can be found at your local hunting equipment stores.

The Nerfball transmitter practice method is easy, simple, cheap, realistic and a great way to get in a lot of great transceiver practice. With two Nerfball transmitters you can quickly become skilled at multiple transceiver searches. I have had a number of avalanche professionals laugh when I pull out a Nerfball from my pack. But, once they tried the Nerfball practice method, they see the real value of it. And they end up using it. It doesn’t matter what brand of avalanche rescue transceiver you own. More important is that you’re skilled and confidant with your transceiver. The Nerfball transmitter is one way to improve your skills, during summer and winter. I hope you’ll try it out.
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Very good! I always love hearing of new ways to practice. :) It's great to be able to switch it up!

Thanks for sharing!!
 
The Nerf Ball idea has been used for beacon searches for over 10 years. It does help in doing the signal search, but is not any help in doing the fine search. I have found that the fine search is where most people mess up. Finding the beacon on top of the snow or just under the surface is not much of a challenge. It's the deeper burials that are the challenge. Remember, the shoveling is the part of the rescue that takes the most time. Effective shoveling techniques are crucial to an effective rescue.
The Nerf Ball trick is good for developing skills for the signal search. Deep burials and beacon parks are good for developing the skills for the course, fine search and probing. Effective probing can make a rescue go 30% faster. The beacon parks are very good at developing these skills. It is a good idea to do some deep beacon burials outside a beacon park so you can practice effective shoveling techniques. I feel many people use too small of a shovel to dig down 3'.
A beacon park is a great tool to quickly keep your skills honed. That is why the beacon manufacturers have developed them. The Nerf Ball trick only develops skills for one part of the search.
Mike Duffy
www.avalanche1.com
 
The Nerf Ball idea has been used for beacon searches for over 10 years. It does help in doing the signal search, but is not any help in doing the fine search. I have found that the fine search is where most people mess up. Finding the beacon on top of the snow or just under the surface is not much of a challenge. It's the deeper burials that are the challenge. Remember, the shoveling is the part of the rescue that takes the most time. Effective shoveling techniques are crucial to an effective rescue.
The Nerf Ball trick is good for developing skills for the signal search. Deep burials and beacon parks are good for developing the skills for the course, fine search and probing. Effective probing can make a rescue go 30% faster. The beacon parks are very good at developing these skills. It is a good idea to do some deep beacon burials outside a beacon park so you can practice effective shoveling techniques. I feel many people use too small of a shovel to dig down 3'.
A beacon park is a great tool to quickly keep your skills honed. That is why the beacon manufacturers have developed them. The Nerf Ball trick only develops skills for one part of the search.
Mike Duffy
www.avalanche1.com

Agreed that the nerf ball isnt the best for fine searches. Its biggest asset is that it can be used to create realistic scenarios, I.E. park on top of a hill (with VERY stable snow of course), toss nerf ball while in full gear on your sled. searching takes a lot longer when you are all bundled up and wearing a big helmet etc. You will quickly realize the penalty for going too low.

Practicing in a beacon park is a great thing, and I agree that fine search and probing and digging are key areas to work on and should be practiced a lot, but I think a lot of people will also benefit huge from practicing a more realistic rescue as well. In addition, A lot of people dont have access to ski areas and beacon parks, most people have to get their buddy to go bury a pack with a beacon and take turns practicing. This kind of practice usually takes place on flat ground in comfortable clothing, which as we all know is much easier then a real burial..

The more ideas we can throw out there to get people practicing the better. A couple nerf ball searches followed by some deep burial/multiple searches makes up a good practice session.
 
That helps all of us who do just surface searches, we dont have any parks to practice at here in wis. so we do what we can by burying multiple beacons and then those with beacons have to go find them without knowing where they got burried. it works well but we only bury them a foot deep at best. We do this out in a plowed corn field so you cant tell where it was dug up
 
thats a good idea, i agree with what mike is saying as well....however i think the more time you have the beacon in your hand the better your gonna be. another good idea for a beacon search practice is if u and your buddie are having some beers on night too hide the beacon with the beer....u need a beer, you grab your beacon and then hide it for the next guy once youve found it.
 
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