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March 19, 2011 - Alpental Cornice Control Mission

  • Lowell_Skoog
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19 Mar 2011 22:21 - 21 Mar 2011 09:00 #217066 by Lowell_Skoog


John Stimberis leads the way along the ridge north of Denny Mountain.


At last year's Snowball Benefit for NWAC, Jim Hirshfield (JimH) and I got into a fierce bidding war to see who would accompany Rob Gibson (Gib) and John Stimberis (Stimbuck) on a cornice control mission at Alpental. After we bid the price up, the sponsors decided to give us both the opportunity to go. Today was the big day.

Conditions couldn't have been better. Ten inches of light snow fell overnight and dawn brought broken clouds, sunshine, and beautiful lighting. We met at the ski patrol room at 7 a.m. and were soon on our way up the mountain. The air was cold, but we knew it would warm quickly in the spring sun.



John Stimberis traverses the ridge then prepares a six-pound shot.


At the top of Chair 2 we split in two pairs.  Gib and Jim headed south, while Stimbuck and I followed Aaron Opp to an airy spot near the top of Denny Mountain.  "Jose's" is a tram used to lower shots into a chute at the skiers' left of Upper International.  Aaron and John cheerfully answered my questions and tolerated my picture-taking as they rigged a bag of explosives and connected it to the wire.  After a tug on the igniter, I pushed the bag out into space and it wizzed down the wire toward the target zone.  Using the retrieve line, John guided the bag to a point near the center of the gully.  The air blast triggered an avalanche that sent a powder cloud to the bottom of Upper International.



Stimbuck hunts cornices on Denny Mountain.


After retrieving the tram sling, John and I climbed to the top of Denny Mountain and began traversing the ridge northward.  We paused at several spots to watch patrollers placing shots at various locations on the mountain.  As we got farther along the ridge, we relied on spotters and radios to help us locate the biggest cornices.  John explained that when the cornices are sturdier, it is necessary to climb to the back of the cornice, dig a hole, and bury a shot to knock it down.  We had a rope and climbing harnesses for this purpose, but they were unnecessary today.  With the big snowfalls recently, the cornices at Alpental are soft and reactive and we needed only to lob a charge onto the surface of the snow to bring them down.



Stimbuck lobs a shot onto a fragile cornice.


For most of our shots, John taped together three two-pound Powerex charges.  The shots were rigged with two (redundant) 90-second fuses.  After igniting the fuses we would throw the shot and then scurry down the trail to hide behind a tree.  Covering your ears is mandatory if you want to retain your hearing.  The blast rattles your internal organs, showers snow down your neck from any nearby tree, and sends cracks shooting across the snow as the whole ridge shudders.



Aftermath of a cornice shot.


Placing the shots was great fun.  The only downside was that we didn't get to watch the cornices we knocked down as they fell.  Fortunately, we made up for this by trading places with Gib and Jim in the afternoon.  As they climbed to the ridge above Piss Pass, we relaxed and watched their handiwork with video cameras ready.  Unfortunately, we both missed recording the most photogenic cornice fall (which pulled out a slab avalanche above the High Traverse) due to photographer error.

Although most of our time was spent working, we got in some very nice turns as well.  The skiing was excellent at Alpental today if you stayed on north-facing slopes.  Sunnier slopes got pretty heavy by mid-day.  Overall the Alpental cornice control mission was a great experience, and if they offer this for auction again at Snowball, I heartily recommend it.



The Alpental backcountry is open!


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20 Mar 2011 06:51 #217067 by haggis
Super photo's Lowell! Priceless mission, glad you got the good day for it with sun and overnight snow.

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20 Mar 2011 11:40 #217068 by Zap
Thanks for sharing a glimpse of what goes on before the backcountry gates open.  A perfect day.

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  • gravitymk
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20 Mar 2011 14:29 #217069 by gravitymk
Excellent write up Lowell, and + props for bidding up the Mission at the Snow Ball.

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  • Amar Andalkar
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20 Mar 2011 16:57 #217070 by Amar Andalkar
Replied by Amar Andalkar on topic Re: March 19, 2011 - Alpental Cornice Control Mission
Nice report, and unique too!

I wanted to see just how much of the cornice was blown off, so I altered one of your cornice photos (scale by 135%, rotate 8° CW, crop to 800x533) to match up corresponding features as closely as possible and make a better comparison:




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  • Lowell_Skoog
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20 Mar 2011 17:45 #217075 by Lowell_Skoog
Nice job, Amar.

The photo of Stimbuck lobbing the charge was taken with roughly the same focal length as the others, but I cropped it to make it easier to see him. With a good eye you can see where he laid the shot. I think we put on a nice show for the customers watching from International.

I pulled out my old (2005 vintage) Canon digital SLR for this trip because I wanted wider angle shots than my little point-and-shoot can do. Now I think I need a new camera. The shots out of my pocket camera (Canon SD880 IS) had better detail than the SLR. I imagine that the technology has gotten a lot better in six years, and my old Digital Rebel XT is becoming out of date.

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  • Stimbuck
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20 Mar 2011 17:48 #217074 by Stimbuck
Lowell,

Thank you for the great post!

Cheers,

$

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20 Mar 2011 19:58 #217076 by stihlfree
Nice report Lowell, and nice job bidding your way there! the boom is nice, but it is a bummer not getting to watch it run. Looks like you had the best day visibility wise!
Amar, really like your comparisons of the cornice shots!
$$, hopefully have some things in the works to be back out there full time next winter to follow ya through the poop again.....we'll see. Tell the bros howdy. TN

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20 Mar 2011 23:37 #217077 by JimH
Lowell - thanks for the great report!

I hope to add something soon on the route that Gib and I took, which included a pretty comprehensive tour of daily control work at Alpental. Serves me right for showing up on a day when they had to deal with 10 inches of new. ;D We started with the 50 lb bags they use to rattle the cliffs above the lower half of the ski area, moved on to some much needed ski cutting below Elevator Gate, and finished with a successful cornice mission. A fantastic way to spend a day.

Our cornice was out near Corry's Couloir, a little before Piss Pass above the traverse.  Does anyone have a picture of Corry? Apparently she was pretty good looking, and a pretty quick study when it came to skiing too (lots of good stories all day long).

For now, I just wanted to add this short clip I got of one of your cornices crashing down onto the traverse:

www.vimeo.com/21284552

And I have to add that while we were standing there waiting for the cornice to drop, at least 4 guys ducked the rope behind us. They turned around when they saw the line of about 7 red jackets just around the corner, waiting at the top of the traverse. Good for them, considering what was about to happen.

Hope you enjoy the quick video of your handiwork.

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  • Chuck C
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21 Mar 2011 08:37 #217078 by Chuck C
Great report. We were at the base area watching the show before heading out to Pineapple Pass. A couple of the charges knocked the cornices off the bears in the base area.

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  • gravitymk
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21 Mar 2011 08:40 #217080 by gravitymk
Something new (at least in my experience at Alpental) regarding cornice control work that they have also tired with some success a couple of times this year...
Rather than placing hand charges on the top of the ridge, they have been setting up a couple (or more) bags of ANFO under the cornice area in question near to where the high-t runs. The resulting concussive shock dropping several of the cornices that had developed on the adjacent ridge. I have video I'll try to post up later (I'll repost and add a link) from a Saturday about three weeks ago

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  • Lowell_Skoog
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21 Mar 2011 08:52 #217081 by Lowell_Skoog

For now, I just wanted to add this short clip I got of one of your cornices crashing down onto the traverse:

www.vimeo.com/21284552


Nice Jim!

I'm curious...In the video I can see a very fragile looking blob a little farther out along the ridge than the blast in the video. Did we get that one too? If so, then that was the one that John dispatched in the still photos above. (The shot in the video may have been one of mine.)

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22 Mar 2011 12:27 #217084 by alpenbum
Awesome!! Saw you guys up there. Great views.

Shout out to Stimbuck and the Alpy Pro Patrol. Thanks for all the hard work!

I got to take one of the companion rescue courses with Pro Patrol. The courses couldn't have been taught any better.

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  • Lowell_Skoog
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24 Mar 2011 20:39 #217094 by Lowell_Skoog
For future reference, here's Jim's TR with a more complete video:

www.turns-all-year.com/skiing_snowboardi...ex.php?topic=20306.0

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  • Marcus
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27 Mar 2011 13:14 #217104 by Marcus
Great TR Lowell -- I'll be bidding on it if it comes up again :)

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