Sunday, February 5th, 2012

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I listen to KQED daily as I drive into work in the morning. Today I was pleasantly surprised by a solid piece, “The Science of Snow,” featuring Squaw Valley ski patrollers and the Sierra Avalanche Center. It’s definitely worth a listen. Good work KQED!!

QUEST on KQED Public Media.

My mornings go like this: I wake up, shower, eat breakfast, then check the Sierra Avalanche Center (SAC) advisory and forecast.

Reading the advisory has become a daily habit for me – whether I’m skiing that day or not. Reading it daily gives you a

On the surface, this is a simple and happy story. A snowboarder at Loveland Pass in CO got caught in an avalanche and luckily survived. He was carried down the slope and ended up buried up to his waist – right-side up. Thank goodness.

But watch th

With the start of the ski season, I thought it prudent to do a roundup of avalanche resources available online and in the Sierra Nevada region.

Now you have no excuse. Go take that avalanche course you’ve been putting off. It’ll make the backcount

Thanks to BCA (makers of great backcountry gear including the most-used avalanche beacons) and Teton Gravity Research (the venerable media company responsible for AMAZING films like the recently debuted Re:Session) for this 7-part video series on ava

I’m not sure about the history of this video. It says it was shot in April of 2008, but the Vimeo page says it way uploaded just a few weeks ago. So many of you may have seen this already. But if not, watch it!

It shows the entire sequence of a Ta

My climbing buddy (known in some circles as Peerzat) is flying in from Minneapolis tomorrow morning. We're gonna head up to Shasta for a climb/ski descent. This is one of my favorite ski descents anywhere – 7000 vertical feet of awesomeness

Wow this is sobering. All those warm spring days when you figure… eh, there's no real avy danger today, right? Well… this reminds you to never ever let your guard down.    Via TetonAT: