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Risk check list PDF Print E-mail

Ask these questions during tour planning, at the time of actual route selection on the day of the tour, and when traversing individual slopes during a tour.

Check the three key factors that affect avalanche risk, snow+weather, terrain, people, at every step asking at least the questions in the table below. The answers to these questions and your own competence and knowledge determines your decisions.

There is no absolute standard. What might be safe for a highly skilled group that takes every precaution and modifies its behaviour and route according to the risks would be absolute folly for an inexperienced groupquite unable to do this.

If in doubt, assume the worst case.

There is no such thing as zero risk. Hoar frost and graupel layers can persist in the snowpack all winter long with a correspondingly high slab avalanche risk throughout the winter even though all other factors might suggest otherwise. Check.

Route Selection
 

Snowpack/Weather

Terrain

People

Tour planning

Plan in checkpoints and alternatives.

Avalanche Bulletin.
Weather forecast.
Information from locals.
1:25,000 Map.
Gradients from map
Guide books.
Photos.
Own knowledge.

Size of group ?
Motivations?
Expectations?
Skill level?
Equipment.
Who responsible?

Route selection

Use checkpoints and alternatives.

Avalanche Bulletin Risk Factor and type of risk.
First day after new snow? Fresh snow still on the trees?
Temperature?
Actual snow conditions. WUMM sounds?
Wind direction?
Drifting?
Avalanches?
Oddities.
Visibility.

Check terrain on sight.
Gradient.
Terrain traps.
Existing ski tracks
-how many? How old?
Orientation, steepness of risk slopes.
Reports from others.

Who's in my group?
Competetive atmosphere?
Time plan for tour?
Itinerary left with someone?
Backmarker.
Appoint possible search leaders and stress need for discipline.
Check all Transceivers transmitting.

Individual Slope

Go / No Go

How much new snow?
Signs of wind?
Lee or windward?
Visibility?
Solar radiation?
Temperature?
Snowpack stability?
Possible slab risk?
Alarm signs?

Actual gradient?
Steepest part of slope?

Avalanche Bulletin Risk Factor

What slope is important?

1

on slope nearby

2

slope up to 40m away

3

over whole slope.

4

Whole slope and runout areas.


At factor 3 limit route to 30° slopes maximum.
At factor 4 limit route to 25° slopes maximum.
What's above me?
What's below me?,
Convex slope?
Near the ridge?
Any wind pockets?

How many people on the slope?
Do not be pressured by presence of other groups.
Group discipline?
Tiredness?
Technique?
Spacing?
Think!

Risk Assessment Checklist

 

Low risk

Some risk

Moderate risk

Considerable risk

Very high risk

Snowfall

  

 

 

 

 

Depth of new snow

0cm

10cm

20cm

40cm

80cm

160cm+

Time since last snow

4 weeks

2 weeks

1 week

4 days

2 days

1 day

Wind

 

 

 

 

 

 

Strength

No wind

Light wind

.

.

Strong wind
Heavy drifting

Storm

Lee or windward?

Windward slope

.

.

.

Wind dunes
Wind ripples

Lee slope

Time since last wind

4 weeks

2 weeks

1 week

4 days

2 days

< 1 day

Temperature

 

 

 

 

 

 

during snowfall

0° C

-2° C

-4° C

-8° C

-15° C

-25° C

Temperature change

Increased to 0° C for >2days

.

.

.

Midday, full sun

Increased to 0°C in last hours
Föhn

Snowpack

 

 

 

 

 

 

What surface below new snow

Old consolodated snow

Fine powder

Powder

Crust

Firn
Ice

Loose snow.
Hoar frost

Old snow structure

Stable fine crystal layers

Frozen snowpack (becomes wet and dangerous in sun)

.

.

Wet ground, (grass)
Warm, wet snowpack

Graupel or hoar frost layers between layers.

Terrain

 

 

 

 

 

 

Gradient of slope

<20°

<30°

.

>30°

.

> 40°

Form of slope

Flat
No bumps or gulleys

Concave
Many old ski tracks

.

Convex

.

Near crest of ridge
Gulley, funnel

Group

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Fully trained, analytical, disciplined

.

.

.

Other groups skiing powder nearby

Excitable,
Excited, Competitive, Targets

 
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