(English) Avalanche Rescue Caught on Video
Ci spiace, ma questo articolo è disponibile soltanto in English.… Read more
Ci spiace, ma questo articolo è disponibile soltanto in English.… Read more
Ci spiace, ma questo articolo è disponibile soltanto in English.… Read more
Ci spiace, ma questo articolo è disponibile soltanto in English.… Read more
In a dramatic avalanche rescue in New Zealand, a 19-year-old Queenstown teenager rescued his father with an avalanche rescue transceiver.
Fer Barrios recounts his rescue last season in the Catalon Pyrenees of Spain using his Tracker DTS avalanche transceiver.
No beacons, no probes, no shovels. One death and one near miss.
I was talking to a guy the other day about backcountry skiing and he used the phrase “back in the day…” and he was about 35 years old. This is the real deal from “back in the day:”
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=La21cqYJnWU&feature=related[yframe url='http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=La21cqYJnWU&feature=related']… Read more
Nick Dillsworth describes the avalanche near Telluride, Colorado in which he was buried with his Avalung, then rescued by his brother Joe, who was using an avalanche transceiver. Nick says he is now in the market for a Float avalanche airbag.
BCA tech rep Nick Armitage located the transmit signals of Gregory Seftick and Walter Kuhl on Saturday in Garnet Canyon, in Grand Teton National Park. The two victims succumbed to an avalanche while camped in the basin during a snowstorm the weekend before. After six days of searching with probe lines, dog teams, and Recco detectors, Armitage picked up a faint signal with his Tracker2 avalanche transceiver. The victims were buried 13 feet deep and were evacuated by helicopter on Easter Sunday.
A helmet cam video from Jeff Wyshynski shows first-hand how a Float 30 avalanche airbag from Backcountry Access (BCA) can save a life.
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