Skier Carried in Early-Season Avalanche in California's Eastern Sierra, Walks Away Uninjured - SnowBrains
Briefly

Skier Carried in Early-Season Avalanche in California's Eastern Sierra, Walks Away Uninjured - SnowBrains
"A skier was swept about 150 feet in an avalanche on Mt. Olsen in the Virginia Lakes area of California's Eastern Sierra Mountains on Sunday, November 30, according to an update shared by the Eastern Sierra Avalanche Center (ESAC) on December 2. The avalanche occurred at roughly 10,600 feet on a northeast-facing slope and broke 12 to 24 inches deep on a layer of weak, faceted snow."
"ESAC described the slide as a hard slab, a type of avalanche that tends to break suddenly and carry significant force. The skier who triggered the slide was carried downslope but was not injured. ESAC noted that early-season snowpack conditions can create deceptively high risks. With thin coverage, exposed rocks, and persistent weak layers lurking beneath recent snow, a relatively small slide can have outsized consequences."
An avalanche on Mt. Olsen in the Virginia Lakes area of California's Eastern Sierra swept a skier about 150 feet on November 30. The slide occurred near 10,600 feet on a northeast-facing slope and broke 12 to 24 inches deep on a layer of weak, faceted snow. ESAC classified the event as a hard slab that breaks suddenly and carries significant force. The skier who triggered the slide was carried downslope but was not injured. Early-season conditions with thin coverage, exposed rocks, and persistent weak layers increase risk and can cause small slides to have outsized consequences. The skier submitted an observation to aid public forecasting and backcountry awareness.
Read at SnowBrains
Unable to calculate read time
[
|
]