Jan 17, 2025
Colorado’s Avalanche Information Center says a lone skier triggered the avalanche that buried and killed him in southern Colorado’s San Juan Mountains earlier this month. The agency wrote in a Jan. 16 report that the victim was found by his wife, who contacted the Ouray County Sheriff’s Office after he failed to check in with her. She then drove to Red Mountain Pass and snowshoed to the slope where the avalanche took place. The woman located her husband’s body using a transceiver and avalanche probe, digging his remains out of the debris with the help of other backcountry skiers and members of Ouray Mountain Rescue Team. Related Articles Crashes and Disasters | CDOT to double arsenal of mountainside avalanche blasters in war against highway-covering snow slides Crashes and Disasters | Backcountry skier killed in avalanche in Colorado’s San Juan Mountains Crashes and Disasters | Dangerous avalanche conditions in Colorado mountains prompt holiday warning Crashes and Disasters | Colorado weather: Mountain snow will make holiday travel risky, avalanche danger high Crashes and Disasters | Backcountry skier rescued from avalanche near Berthoud Pass The CAIC wrote in its report that it was unable to speak to anyone who observed the Jan. 7 slide or the events that led up to it. However, investigators said an unusually snowy November followed by a mild and dry December created a fragile snowpack that was covered by a layer of powder at the time of the disaster. The agency said the skier who died was descending at the time of the slide and wore an avalanche airbag backpack, which was armed and functional but did not deploy. Spokesperson Kelsy Been later confirmed that the man was suspected of triggering the avalanche. The risk of avalanches was said to be moderate at the time — the third-highest risk category of five defined by the CAIC. Solo backcountry travelers were said to account for six of the 33 avalanche deaths recorded in Colorado between Oct. 1, 2020, and Jan. 7, 2025, and at least one solo traveler has died in each of the past five avalanche seasons. Sign up to get crime news sent straight to your inbox each day.
Respond, make new discussions, see other discussions and customize your news...

To add this website to your home screen:

1. Tap tutorialsPoint

2. Select 'Add to Home screen' or 'Install app'.

3. Follow the on-scrren instructions.

Feedback
FAQ
Privacy Policy
Terms of Service