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Courses and more information
This is probably a frequently asked question so forgive my ignorance.
Does anyone know of good avalanche and back country courses in the California/Tahoe region. I am just looking for information on safety issues so that I can occasionally travel away from the populated ski resorts. |
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#2
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On Fri, 12 Sep 2003 14:07:12 -0700, "Justin Bischoff"
wrote: This is probably a frequently asked question so forgive my ignorance. Does anyone know of good avalanche and back country courses in the California/Tahoe region. I am just looking for information on safety issues so that I can occasionally travel away from the populated ski resorts. The National Ski Patrol does a number of courses, including Level I and II Avalanche at various relevant locations around the country. See: www.nsp.org under Education. Also, some climbing guide services will sponsor similar training. Note that taking a course does not reduce the chances of an avalanche or make one more survivable. All it can do is add to your common sense and judgement, to be elsewhere when an avalanche happens. Happy trails, Gary (net.yogi.bear) ------------------------------------------------ at the 51st percentile of ursine intelligence Gary D. Schwartz, Needham, MA, USA Please reply to: garyDOTschwartzATpoboxDOTcom |
#3
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In article ,
Gary S. Idontwantspam@net wrote: Does anyone know of good avalanche and back country courses in the California/Tahoe region. I am just looking for information on safety issues so that I can occasionally travel away from the populated ski resorts. Some web searching on Alpine Skills Institute (Donner Summit), and Couloir Magazine (Truckee) might be useful. Also, staff at Alpenglow and Backcountry stores in Tahoe City. |
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On Fri, 12 Sep 2003 14:07:12 -0700, "Justin Bischoff"
wrote: This is probably a frequently asked question so forgive my ignorance. Does anyone know of good avalanche and back country courses in the California/Tahoe region. I am just looking for information on safety issues so that I can occasionally travel away from the populated ski resorts. This is just South of there, but the school has a good reputation. I did one of their telemark festivals and had a great time and learned a lot: http://www.mtadventure.com/index.html hth; DCraig at rain dot org. |
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On Fri, 12 Sep 2003 22:33:25 +0000 (UTC), Kurt
wrote: In article , Gary S. says... The National Ski Patrol does a number of courses, including Level I and II Avalanche at various relevant locations around the country. You know, I've taken both NSP avie courses and courses geared towards backcountry travelers. As a backcountry skier and NOT a ski patroller, I felt that the courses more geared toward the backcountry skier were more my style. YMMV. AAI (out of Jackson) provided an excellent class: The one that I've taken twice is co-sponsored by the NSP, Appalachian Mtn. Club, and taught in part by the USFS Snow Rangers from Tuckerman Ravine. That one had plenty of backcountry specific info, as well as local info (where the leeward slopes are, etc). I would agree that some are very much more area focused, but in this case the ski area is the East side of Mt. Washington, NH. Not a lot of these offered in the Northeast. Note that taking a course does not reduce the chances of an avalanche or make one more survivable. All it can do is add to your common sense and judgement, to be elsewhere when an avalanche happens. Time in the backcountry is probably your best bet, well, as long as you don't die gathering up all that experience. Some stats have been mentioned where those who have taken a basic avvy course end up MORE likely to be caught in one. Overconfidence is possible. Happy trails, Gary (net.yogi.bear) ------------------------------------------------ at the 51st percentile of ursine intelligence Gary D. Schwartz, Needham, MA, USA Please reply to: garyDOTschwartzATpoboxDOTcom |
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Does anyone know of good avalanche and back country courses in the
California/Tahoe region. I am just looking for information on safety issues so that I can occasionally travel away from the populated ski resorts. I took one at ASI (Donner summit, old road) a few years ago. Norm Wilson was the instructor. He was good. Several friends have also mentioned that he is good without prompting. I think he lives in the Tahoe area - probably does courses at other places too. -- The suespammers.org mail server is located in California. So are all my other mailboxes. Please do not send unsolicited bulk e-mail or unsolicited commercial e-mail to my suespammers.org address or any of my other addresses. These are my opinions, not necessarily my employer's. I hate spam. |
#7
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-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
In article , Hal Murray wrote: Does anyone know of good avalanche and back country courses in the California/Tahoe region. I am just looking for information on safety issues so that I can occasionally travel away from the populated ski resorts. I took one at ASI (Donner summit, old road) a few years ago. Norm Wilson was the instructor. He was good. Several friends have also mentioned that he is good without prompting. I think he lives in the Tahoe area - probably does courses at other places too. _ Pretty much every guide service in the area offers them. There's ASI http://www.alpineskills.com/mountainguides.htm MAS http://www.mtadventure.com/ _ MAS offers courses in conjuction with REI where you do the class part at the REI store and the field part at Bear Valley. I've gone to their Telemark Festival and they are pretty well organized and professional. Shasta Mountain Guides. http://www.shastaguides.com/ _ They offer a bunch of different classes on Mt. Shasta including a 4 day introduction to all aspects of BC skiing. I've gone on one guided climb/glacier travel class with them and I had a good time. _ The Tahoe City Fire Department has Friday Evening transciever practice classes and the folks at The Backcountry have informal Monday skis which might be a good way to spend a day with some more experienced skiers. _ Booker C. Bense -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: 2.6.2 iQCVAwUBP2NcKWTWTAjn5N/lAQGvPAQAnScA58wyfPwIm5eUAdVuWJu7/gqzrDiF RhDNQAjyaazfTn6waYaHTn+XIo57i32lX0jAZDXaypfdtQ6DDa aV/zaOqYJqdG1d tqlSHbcTqegKU79uatfoy3zo0ZcLptDVOfZe4pSUC/T8bb9/ENJMaK5D/kw6eYfV UsoCdcPpi5I= =nAGE -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- |
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Kurt Knisely wrote: Gary S. says... The National Ski Patrol does a number of courses, including Level I and II Avalanche at various relevant locations around the country. You know, I've taken both NSP avie courses and courses geared towards backcountry travelers. As a backcountry skier and NOT a ski patroller, I felt that the courses more geared toward the backcountry skier were more my style. YMMV. Avalanche courses hosted by NSP backcountry patrols are typically quite good. The Tahoe Backcountry Patrol is known for excellent courses. Choose wisely. American Avalanche Association www.avalanche.org/~aaap/ course curricula are heavily based on the NSP curriculum. As others have pointed out: Alpine Skills International www.alpineskills.com Mountain Adventure Seminars www.mtadventure.com are nearby, and teach the AIARE curriculum www.avtraining.org -Rick. |
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