backcountry button jacksonhole button jansport button marker button scottusa button tecnica button volkl button spyder button webitdesigns button
widsix

Archive for December, 2008

30 December
0Comments

Hats Off to JHMR and Ski Patrol

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Today was amazing at the Jackson Hole Mountain Resort.  JHMR employees and patrol must have worked all night long to get the mountain safe and ready for everyone to ski.  After yesterdays events, it was hard to believe that the gondola opened at 2:30.  

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The skiing was great.  The lower faces were open and full of powder skiing.  The gondola building was cleaned and open.  It was truly hard to believe that an avalanche had swept throughout the area the day before.

Thank you so much to everyone at the Jackson Hole Mountain Resort!!!!!!!!!

29 December
0Comments

Headwall Slide Takes Out Mid-Mountain Lodge

The last couple of days in Jackson Hole have been crazy, terrifying, and tragic. I think the best way to explain what is happening in Jackson is to tell a “story.”

“This story has been passed around and may not be accurate.”

Brain was patrolling the Headwall on Monday morning. The snow pack was been upside down, backwards, and needless to say unstable. The radio station asked everyone to avoid the backcountry, calling it “volatile.” Patrol bombed the headwall with hand charges and nothing moved. More patrolmen hiked up the white spider (the north bootpack of the headwall). They decided to attach a bomb to piece of bamboo. The idea is that the charge will effect more surface area. Brian was stationed on the south side of the Headwall Restaurant ready to hike up the headwall when a deluge of snow headed his way. He ran as fast as could to the safety of the building. The snow caught up to him and pinned him against the wall. “I was pressed up against the wall and snow was piling around me. I kept wiping the snow away from my face in hopes of creating an air pocket.” When the snow settled, Brian was neck deep with one free hand to dig for his radio. “Workers down, need assistance.”

Brain and everyone else involved made it out safely. It is hard to believe the events of today are true. The skiing has been amazing, but the snow pack has been terrifying. I have been skiing with a beacon, shovel, and probe within the resort boundaries. Yesterday I skied one of my favorite resort runs, A-1. I have never been so nervous to drop into A-1. I skied it as fast as I possibly could and then held my breath as I watched my partners descend. Skiing should be full of face shots and high fives, but the reality of it is that it is as only as safe as the surface you are skiing on.

 Jackson Hole Mountain Resort has done an incredible job this past week.  Patrol has been working around the clock to make the mountain safe for everyone to ski.  Yet with a large upside down snow pack, it has been one of the most volatile snowpacks in the last ten years.

“Ski to ski another day!”

JHMR Press Release

Originally Posted by JHMR
(Jackson Hole, Wyoming, December 29, 2008 4:00pm MST) At approximately 9:26 am this morning routine avalanche hazard reduction work by Jackson Hole Mountain Resort (JHMR) Ski Patrol triggered an avalanche of significant size down the southeast aspect of an area at JHMR referred to as the Headwall. The Headwall which had not been open to the public this season to date and was not expected to open in the near future, consists of steep, expert terrain.          

The slide descended from the top of the Headwall, and a second slide was triggered, which continued down to the base of the run reaching the west and south sides of the building that houses three resort restaurants, causing considerable non-structural damage to the building.

This incident took place prior to the Bridger Gondola being open to the public, but a number of JHMR operational employees were in the vicinity. A search for potential victims was conducted and by 10:06am, all JHMR employees were accounted for.

Following the incident a decision was made to close the resort temporarily while further avalanche hazard reduction work took place. Lower mountain lifts were quickly re-opened. At this time the upper mountain remains closed while Ski Patrol continues its avalanche hazard reduction routines in an attempt to get the resort re-opened as quickly and safely as possible. 

Due to the significant snowfall received in the Teton region (62 inches in past seven days), we have received a request from our partners at Bridger Teton National Forest to close the OB gates into the surrounding backcountry. JHMR will honor this request and close all our gates into the backcountry until further notice.

“Our patrollers have done a phenomenal job showing the utmost professionalism and teamwork. I am extremely proud of their efforts and appreciate the risks they take on a daily basis. I also want to acknowledge our entire staff under these challenging circumstances” stated Jerry Blann, President, JHMR.

Jackson Hole Mountain Resort has established standards and protocols for minimizing the risk of avalanche that are based on the current weather and snowpack conditions. Jackson Hole Mountain Resort receives over 400 inches of snow annually and is dedicated to making the skiing and riding as safe as possible for our guests. Avalanche conditions change hour-by-hour and day-by-day. JHMR Ski Patrol continuously monitors elements of the weather and snowpack conditions 24 hours a day throughout the winter and uses this information to continually assess potential hazards.

We acknowledge and are grateful for the quick response of the community including the Teton County Sheriff’s Department, Teton County Search and Rescue and USFS.

27 December
0Comments

RIP 12-27-08 David Nodine

I don’t really know what to say. The snow pack is terrifying and it keeps coming. Patrol is working around the clock to keep us safe. And all we want to do is ski powder. I have followed the reports of lives lost: Snowbird, Squaw, and Park City. I send my condolences and love to the families and friends of the skiers. Jackson Hole has been playing it super safe. The mountain hasn’t opened in two days. Patrol has blown out knees, worked around the clock, and they keep on going.  As I loaded the first tram today, I crossed my fingers that it would be a great day. It wasn’t. Someone lost their life today……………..skiing.

Below is the press release and the news.  And please “ski to ski another day”

Angus M. Thuermer Jr. Jackson, Wyoming
December 27, 2008

An in-bounds avalanche at the Jackson Hole Mountain Resort killed 31-year-old Wilson skier David Nodine Saturday afternoon when it buried him beneath about eight feet of snow, authorities reported.

A number of skiers witnessed the slide break loose and carry the victim and a companion down an expert trail named Paintbrush. The avalanche occurred at approximately 1:25 p.m. and carried the pair about 200 yards, leaving the victim’s companion unburied and uninjured.

Resort brand director Anna Olson said ski patrol had taken normal precautions to reduce avalanche hazard in the area before opening it to the public. Such patrols normally involve the use of explosives to trigger avalanches when slopes are empty of skiers.

“There isn’t an answer as to why that happened there at that time,” she said of the fatality Saturday. “The snowpack appears to be doing this in pockets. Patrol will continue to take precautions.”

Ski patrollers discovered the location of the victim within six minutes by honing in on signals from an avalanche transceiver he wore, resort officials said. It is standard procedure to search for victims first by transceiver, Olson said.

The Bridger-Teton National Forest Avalanche Center said rescuers recovered Nodine within 10 minutes.

The area in question had been opened for the first time this season at 9:36 a.m. on Saturday, Olson reported. “It had been skied quite a bit,” before the two skiers ventured onto the slope, she said.

One of the pair lost a ski when entering the slope with a jump over a short cliff, Olson said. When he got his gear back together, it appeared the two skied the slope simultaneously, she said.

The slab avalanche broke a crown six to eight feet deep, Olson said after talking to ski patrollers. She said patrollers uncovered the victim quickly after they pinpointed his burial site and administered cardio pulmonary resuscitation, to no avail. Medical workers also attempted to revive Nodine using a defibrillation device, again without success. He was pronounced dead at a clinic at the resort base.

Witness at the scene reported as many as 35 workers probing the avalanche slope following the slide. Olson said searchers were able to determine relatively quickly the nobody else was involved.

Two dogs aided in the search.

“As soon as the incident occurred we shut the upper mountain,” Olson said. Investigations continued into the afternoon, she said.

At the resort base, about eight ski patrollers arrived together at approximately 4 p.m. carrying shovels and long avalanche probe poles fully assembled. They were bundled against an ongoing snowstorm, their eyes the only clue to the grim task they had just performed.

The death is the 6th avalanche fatality of the season in North America. It brought a statement of condolence from resort president Jerry Blann.

“We are extremely saddened by this accident and send our thoughts and prayers to the victim’s family and friends,” he said in a statement. “The Tetons have been experiencing severe mountain weather since Dec. 21st with over five feet of snow falling in a very short period of time.”

Hazard Saturday was “considerable” according to the Avalanche Center. During such times “dangerous unstable slabs exist on steep terrain on certain aspects,” the center says.

Daily forecasts are available at jhavalanche.org.

26 December
0Comments

A Dream Come True

 

 

Jackson Hole has a tram.  The new tram in amazing.  It takes 9 minutes to reach the top and holds 100 people.  

The New Tram to the Sky

The New Tram to the Sky

 The unveiling of the tram was incredible.  Right on cue, the snow began to fall as the new red box came down from the ski and the fire works began to blow.  It was truly beautiful.  Over 2000 people came out to see the new tram.  

 

The New Jackson Hole Mountain Resort Tram

The New Jackson Hole Mountain Resort Tram

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

I have always enjoyed the tram, but was surprised at how moved I was by the opening ceremony.  And the next day riding the tram to the top was even more powerful.  Not only does Jackson Hole have some of the best terrain in the US, it now has a tram that races to the top in nine minutes.  And it is just in time.  I leave in twenty days for my first competition in Russia.  I have spent the last week racing the tram.  The idea is to beat the car you ride up to the bottom. That means skiing 4139 feet in less than nine minutes.

26 December
0Comments

FIVE Feet in Five Days!!!!!

 

Best Christmas Present of 2008!

Best Christmas Present of 2008!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Christmas was good this year!  When I opened my eyes and dialed the snow phone all I heard was 20 inches of new snow and still snowing hard.  I jumped out of bed and into my gear and headed for the mountain.  Due to the sketchy snow pack and the massive amounts of it, Jackson Hole Mountain Resort had their hands full.  I couldn’t wait for the mountain to open.  The mountain was delayed opening and I headed for Snow King.  My second Christmas present was opened at 11:30.  I skied first tracks down Elk at Snow King Resort (the local town hill where I grew up skiing).  The snow was so deep that I could barely breath as a straight-lined down the 40 degree slope.  

 

Choking on Pow at Snow King - Christmas Day

Choking on Pow at Snow King - Christmas Day

 Merry Christmas to all.  I hope your Christmas was as deep and soft as mine.

24 December
0Comments

Christmas Eve Sunrise

 

The sunrise this morning was a perfect start for Christmas Eve day.  The Tetons have received over two feet of snow in the last four days and the skiing has been great.  I wish everyone happiness and a Merry Christmas.

20 December
0Comments

Flight of the New Tram

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The NEW Jackson Hole Tram took flight today with anxious skiers aboard.  It was a day I will never forget and a day I will always feel fortunate to be a part of.  The temperature may have been -13 degrees, but it did not freeze out the day.  

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The new tram holds 100 people and takes nine minutes to reach the top.  I was asked what the tram meant to me.  After a minute of thought, the best I could come up with is that the tram is my life line to happiness.  Jackson Hole has the best “resort” terrain in the US and tram is the fastest way to tap into it.

19 December
0Comments

Las Lenas 2008 Photos

It is time to say goodbye to Las Lenas. This season was incredible, one of the best. I am headed south to Bariloche today. Just wanted to share some of my favorite photos from Lenas. Can’t wait to come back next year!

Jess me McMillan Sking Hour Glass Couloir

Clare Burns - Rios

colin_skin2.jpg

dakine2.jpg

jess12.jpg

jess_climb2.jpg

jess_spine.jpg

jess21.jpg

jesshitchhike.jpg

jesssinsol02.jpg

mike_cvboot.jpg

skins.jpg

jesswalkingflippers.jpg

img_0543.jpg

jesssinson21.jpg

19 December
0Comments

Jackson Hole's New Tram this Weekend!

The snow is starting to fall in Jackson and the Tram will be packed with skiers on Saturday.  I can’t wait!

 The first Tram box will leave at 10:00 on Saturday and the public will load shortly after.  If you are up for a little partying, there will be free drinks at Nick Wilson’s and at 9:00. Head to the Mangy Moose to celebrate the tram with live music!

19 December
0Comments

Big Sale