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The poor man's selfie drone
Hadn't seen this before, but I disagree.
A friend of mine earns less than $10000 a year, but he travels the world skiing (well, splitboarding actually, but same thing). He buys the cheapest bulk food he can, and lives in a tent most of the year.
You'd be amazed what you can do if you decide to put your passion before literally everything else.
Nobody is going to comment on the title? Nobody who skies like this is truly a "poor man." Not having a lot of money is not the same as being poor.
Just sayin'.
ChaosEngine (Member Profile)
Happy Birthday Kiwi! Hoping you have a wonderful day, preferably filled with bikes and or splitboards
...and a beer.
Have a great day
Buried in an Avalanche
So as a relative newcomer* to the backcountry, here's my $0.02:
They were incredibly lucky.
Going into a gully like that after a snow storm is a "terrain trap" where even a small slide can accumulate very deep snow. Getting buried under 2-3m is bad, but 10m+? Unless you have the world snow shoveling champion team in your party, you're dead.
Good on them for carrying shovels and probes, but where were their transceivers? The article states that the victim had his transceiver with him but the others didn't. A single transceiver is about as useful as a prick in a nunnery.
The only reason that guy is alive is he managed to stick his ski pole above the snow. Without that, by the time they find him, they're not rescuing him, they're recovering the body.
Most importantly, they knew it was a sketchy line and they went anyway (and altogether.... jesus.... spread the fuck out... no-one gonna rescue you if you're all buried).
Right there, that's the fatal mistake. I know guys who have hiked for 6 hours to get to a run, looked at it and turned back. If you're not sure, don't go. Even if it means climbing back out.
So to sum up:
unsure about conditions: don't go
the entire party doesn't have a shovel/probe/transceiver each: don't go
if you absolutely have to go: one at a time and aim for a safe spot
/sermon
I'm being a bit of a prick on this. It's really easy to criticise, but I've been there and I know that powder fever takes hold. But *nature hates you and wants to kill you. Keep that in mind.
* I've been side-country riding for a few years, but started splitboarding last year.
ChaosEngine (Member Profile)
Hoping to do a few splitboarding trips into the backcountry and will probably experiment with some Aikido related videos, but I don't know how successful the results will be
Valid point. I wasn't sure whether or not the issue was with my grammar. I'll rename it.
A business associate just bought one and flew it around for me, which is why I was so interested when that video creator emailed us his video. It's not that easy to know how to control those things to make killer professional-looking videos.
In theory it seems cool, but not that incredible, however in person and the output is really awe-inspiring.
If you start recording some stuff, share some video. I'd love to see what you create.