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Swiss Avalanche fatalities well below average
Posted: 01 June 2007 11:41 AM  
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The Swiss Federal Institute for the Study of Snow and Avalanches has reported that avalanche deaths for the 2006-07 winter were well below average. Avalanches claimed 7 off-piste skiers, 6 ski tourers and 1 other person. No snowboarders or climbers have been killed to date. The figure is well below the long term average of 25 deaths.

The winter was the warmest ever recorded by the Swiss Weather Service with precipitation over the October-April period below average. In the North and West snow cover was practically zero below 2000 meters with some of the lowest figures on record recorded both in terms of depth and length of cover. It was only in rare cases and then just for a limited time that snow depths reached the long term (since 1945) average. During the weather system associated with the hurricane Kyrill on the 19th of January it even rained to 2700m. At high altitude maximum snow depths were reached in March, a month earlier than normal. The thaw in April was very rapid, spring was 2 to 4 weeks early. In short a winter of extremes: late and poor snow coupled with high temperatures.

Generally the snow pack was stable, especially during the second half of winter. Fresh snow and violent winds from the west and rain to 2500 meters overloaded the snow pack and resulted in a number of High avalanche risk days, particularly in the west. Between these episodes humidification at mid-altitudes and high winds at altitude helped stabilized the snow-pack over much of the country.

The situation was different in the inter-alpine regions, for example the Grisons were protected from westerly gales and experienced cooler temperatures. Even if the avalanche risk never reached High the fragile snow-pack created tricky avalanche conditions. There were incidents caused by slab avalanches throughout the winter.

Overall the SLF recorded 111 avalanches involving 197 people. There were 15 deaths, 35 injuries and 20 avalanches caused damage to infrastructure. These good figures have a number of causes.

1. The warm weather and rain at altitude helped to stabilize the snow-pack.
2. Poor snow cover, particularly until the New Year, severely restricted any off-piste skiing and ski touring.
3. The publicity about poor snow conditions in the mainstream press meant that less people overall visited the mountains.

The SLF also hopes that their education programmes have had a positive effect on the behaviour of backcountry travellers.

http://www.slf.ch

[ Edited: 01 June 2007 11:45 AM by davidof]
 
 
Posted: 27 June 2007 10:34 AM   [ # 1 ]  
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As a footnote to that, the body of the victim from an incident on 6th January at Pizol Wildsee, Mels in the canton of St.Gallen was only recovered from the partially frozen lake Wildsee on June 24th 2007.

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Posted: 28 June 2007 10:14 PM   [ # 2 ]  
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I recall you posted some more info on the Swiss situation…

http://www.mysnowsports.com/News/article/sid=691.html

You may remember that there have been a couple of fatal avalanches above the lac de Tignes in France over the last few years - lakes and rivers make a particuarly nasty terrain trap. Must be very distressing for the family.

 
 
Posted: 28 June 2007 10:37 PM   [ # 3 ]  
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It was my girlfriend who mentioned it to me, there was an article in “20 minutes” apparently. Along with one about an incident this Sunday where a lone hiker fell 200m and died which she also bought to my attention after I came back on Sunday cut and bruised after taking a fall off the side of Pic Chaussy also hiking alone on an infrequently travelled route, luckily I fell some way down and not on the ridge which also has a 200m drop.

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Posted: 28 June 2007 10:51 PM   [ # 4 ]  
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In the local Grenoble paper… the Dauphine Libere, they say the typical walking fatality is a middle aged bloke doing some extreme hiking alone. We get a lot of people slipping on humid grassy slopes in the early morning. One local climber suggests carrying an ice-axe on these kinds of slopes.

Talking of falls we had a big accident in the Ecrins yesterday. Five climbers were killed while climbing down the normal route from the cime du Vallon at 3400 meters. The group, 3 doctors from Lyon plus the two daughters (aged 17 and 21) of one of the climbers. They were apparently roped up and using crampons and the conditions were good on this relatively easy route. Hard to imagine how the mother will cope with this.

 
 
Posted: 12 July 2007 01:14 PM   [ # 5 ]  
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We heard that there have been six deaths on the south-west side of the Jungfrau today in an avalanche near the Rottal glacier. It seems a snow slide swept two groups of three climbers off the mountain.

 
 
Posted: 13 July 2007 03:58 PM   [ # 6 ]  
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These were young Swiss soldiers, close to completing their recruits’ school. There is a report on Swissinfo today.
http://www.swissinfo.org/eng/swissinfo.html?siteSect=881&sid=8019444

 
 
Posted: 16 July 2007 10:46 AM   [ # 7 ]  
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davidof - 12 July 2007 01:14 PM

We heard that there have been six deaths on the south-west side of the Jungfrau today in an avalanche near the Rottal glacier. It seems a snow slide swept two groups of three climbers off the mountain.

The local press are now reporting that they weren’t carrying avalanche transceivers apparently, not so unusual in the summer but odd given the elevated risk last week. It’s worth pointing out these are not raw recruits as such, the unit in question I believe doesn’t openly recruit but would be made up of experienced mountaineers, ski/climb instructors and guides etc and there’s a pre-requisite level for entrants.

[ Edited: 16 July 2007 10:54 AM by ise]
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Posted: 16 July 2007 06:56 PM   [ # 8 ]  
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Yes I read they were accompanied by UIAGM guides. There was some comment that they were at the end of their training and had become frustrated at the poor weather then decided to go when they got a window. Apparently another guide and client climbed down from the hut on the same day judging the conditions too dangerous, much to the protest of the client. I also see there is some confusion about whether it was an avalanche or cornice fall. I checked on the SLF website

http://wa.slf.ch/index.php?id=271

and they don’t yet have the accident up. I know that the press like to classify everything that happens as avalanches. wink

There does seem to be a culture of risk in Army exercises…

http://pistehors.com/news/ski/comments/british-soldiers-hit-by-mont-blanc-avalanche/

http://pistehors.com/news/ski/comments/2-soldiers-killed-in-avalanche-near-tignes/

http://pistehors.com/news/ski/comments/3-soldiers-killed-in-hautes-alpes-avalanche/

 
 
Posted: 17 July 2007 09:35 AM   [ # 9 ]  
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davidof - 16 July 2007 06:56 PM

Yes I read they were accompanied by UIAGM guides. There was some comment that they were at the end of their training and had become frustrated at the poor weather then decided to go when they got a window. Apparently another guide and client climbed down from the hut on the same day judging the conditions too dangerous, much to the protest of the client. I also see there is some confusion about whether it was an avalanche or cornice fall. I checked on the SLF website

http://wa.slf.ch/index.php?id=271

and they don’t yet have the accident up. I know that the press like to classify everything that happens as avalanches. wink

There does seem to be a culture of risk in Army exercises…

http://pistehors.com/news/ski/comments/british-soldiers-hit-by-mont-blanc-avalanche/

http://pistehors.com/news/ski/comments/2-soldiers-killed-in-avalanche-near-tignes/

http://pistehors.com/news/ski/comments/3-soldiers-killed-in-hautes-alpes-avalanche/

If you look at the Swissinfo link (above) there’s now a video report with, I presume, some footage of the site and it’s clearer what happened.

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Posted: 17 July 2007 06:14 PM   [ # 10 ]  
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The cause of the accident is still being investigated

http://www.tsr.ch/tsr/index.html?siteSect=200002&sid=8026642&cKey=1184578268000

so far it seems that the hypothese was a corniche fall causing an avalanche, this would not normally be counted as an avalanche accident for the SLF statistics which is possibly why it has not yet appeared on their website. However the Swiss Army are implying that it a fall with the avalanche having occured earlier although why two groups were taken is not clear. The reason for the doubt is that three ice axes belonging to the group were left on the face. I’m not totally convinced by this theory. it is possible that it was the top layer that slid destabilizing the climbers whose crampons were maybe not well enough embedded in the more stable base layer.

http://www.lematin.ch/pages/home/actu/suisse/actu_suisse__1?contenu=278264

This is a report that Harry Sonderegger, an experienced Swiss guide tried to dissaude the group from the climb. He had witnessed another army group in difficulity on a similar face on Wednesday when they triggered a small snow slide and was not impressed by their conduct on the mountain. Some experts have put the accident down to group dynamics and “go fever”. Sonnderegger said that he would never have attempted the route in what were effectively winter conditions… 60cm of fresh snow with large drifts in places.

The guardian of the Mönchjoch refuge also doesn’t mince his words “those army boys are completely barking!”, he complained.

 
 
Posted: 18 July 2007 12:27 PM   [ # 11 ]  
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one of the soldiers has confirmed the idea that the accident was due to a fall rather than an avalanche

http://www.24heures.ch/pages/home/24_heures/l_actu/suisse/suisse_detail/(contenu)/108989

he slammed “armchair critics” who weren’t there.

 
 
Posted: 20 July 2007 10:44 PM   [ # 12 ]  
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More about this accident on Swissinfo today.

“The army has asked the Federal Institute for Snow and Avalanche Research in Davos to help clarify weather conditions at the time of the accident.”

Guides directly involved in the Jungfrau accident have been requested not to talk in public, by Georg Flepp, the mountain guide association’s president.

http://www.swissinfo.org/eng/front/detail/Enquiry_continues_into_fatal_Jungfrau_accident.html?siteSect=105&sid=8041288&cKey=1184961066000

 
 
Posted: 05 October 2007 09:08 AM   [ # 13 ]  
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The Swiss inquiry as confirmed that an avalanche was the cause of the deaths of the 3 army recruits

http://www.romandie.com/infos/ats/display2.asp?page=20071004150859511172194810700_brf046.xml&associate=phf1038

The inquiry confirmed the risk on the day as “considerable - 3” and that the team were not carrying avalanche rescue gear which “in any case would not have served any purpose” - according to the SLF. A civil inquiry has been opened for manslaughter against the two guides… however the judge said that no conclusion should be assumed from this process.

 
 
Posted: 09 October 2007 08:30 AM   [ # 14 ]  
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"Alpinist” is carrying much the same story but in English :

http://www.alpinist.com/doc/web07f/newswire-switzerland-jungfrau-military

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Posted: 09 October 2007 09:48 AM   [ # 15 ]  
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Thanks,

It just goes to show that it is important not to jump to any hasty conclusions in these sorts of incidents.

 
 
   
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