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Me, post-holing in the Deadman drift |
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Gordon completing his run through the trees |
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Excellent snow conditions as we near a high point above Deadman bowls |
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Jasmine got this photo of me struggling in the icy-hard drift |
We always knew there could be trouble with the Deadman gully, but didn't experience it first hand until this past week.
The gully is about three-quarters of a mile up the road behind the Kings Hill cabin, and is generally carved up in such a way that one must proceed cautiously so as not to slip down a steep draw into the trees about 75 feet below.
It usually means negotiating a narrow ridge of snow about 50 feet in length, sometimes skiing behind a drift or just getting up on the ridge and balancing across it.
In the 40-plus years I've skied this, I've never had much trouble with it. We know it can avalanche, but have never experienced it.
Gordon,
Jasmine and I did Deadman Friday, and for the most part the snow was
excellent (even through the trees) and the temperatures 20 degrees
warmer than in town.
As we approached the drift we all noticed our skis weren't holding an edge....slipping on the downhill side, making skiing rough.
When we came to the gully, the drift was reduced to a narrow, almost pointed ridge, hard as rock.
Jasmine's skis seemed to hold it. I don't know why Gordon and I couldn't set ours. Maybe age.
Gordon,
ahead of me, couldn't negotiate it and took off his left ski and
post-holed with his right above the treacherous icy downhill slide. He
was really stuck until Jasmine skied above him and took his pack and his
arm, slowly pulling him up above the drift.
I thought I could
work my way behind the drift, but was mistaken, and took off my skis,
planting them in front of me, and post-holing, until Jasmine came and
took my skis.
It was some of the most difficult post-holding
I've ever done. First, I used my knees to break through crust and I
crawled, planting my skis a few inches ahead of me as I was able.
Eventually, I was able to get upright and post-hole.
I glanced down
only once to assess what might happen if I slipped. It wouldn't have
been pretty. By the time I reached Gordon and Jasmine I was out of
breath and thoroughly exhausted. I'll bet it took us 45 minutes to
cross the gully.
I told them it seemed as though I had used as much
energy crossing that small distance as I would normally expend on the
full trip.
I'd never seen conditions quite like this, and hope never to see such again.
Thank goodness the rest of the trip was relatively easy, encountering some of the nicest snow we've had through the trees with sharp turns on the downhill, which is often icy and treacherous.
My friend Mark Hertenstein asked when it was the last time I had sharpened my edges. Never. Why Jasmine's edges held and mine and Gordon's didn't is puzzling.
Wayne Phillips questioned if we had worn transceivers, as we had often done in the past. No.
He suggested we abandon the route across the gully and instead use a direct route from the cabin to the top of Kings Hill Mountain instead. Good idea.
The trip was a reminder of how quickly things can go wrong.