UDOT PLANNED AVALANCHE CLOSURES!!

Accident: No Name Bowl

Observer Name
Brett Kobernik
Observation Date
Sunday, December 4, 2005
Avalanche Date
Saturday, December 3, 2005
Region
Salt Lake » Park City Ridgeline » No Name Bowl
Location Name or Route
Elevation
9,700'
Aspect
Northeast
Slope Angle
37°
Trigger
Skier
Trigger: additional info
Unintentionally Triggered
Avalanche Type
Hard Slab
Weak Layer
Facets
Depth
20"
Width
600'
Vertical
1,250'
Caught
4
Carried
4
Buried - Partly
4
Accident and Rescue Summary

Accident Summary:

Four skiers were caught in a large avalanche on Saturday, December 3rd, 2005. The skiers had decided to go to No Name Bowl on J’s recommendation. They were looking for good powder skiing. The group had skied two runs successfully and returned to the top. At around 12:45 pm they then traversed farther out to the north to ski where there were still fresh tracks. J, R, and JN skied the slope and regrouped where they thought they were clear of the slide path. RR was two or three turns into the bowl when it fractured. He went for a ride as the 600’ wide avalanche started down hill. It overtook the other three skiers and all luckily only ended up partially buried or mostly buried.

Rescue Summary:

Two of the victims were buried deep enough that they were not able to dig themselves out. The other two were able to deg themselves out then help dig out the rest. They regrouped by about 1:00 pm to decide how to evacuate the area as they had lost most of their gear including skis, poles, and some of their clothing such as gloves, etc. They then called for help and were evacuated by helicopter by 4:45 pm.

Comments

All of the skiers had near 30 years of backcountry skiing experience each except J who still had around 10 years experience. When RR was interviewed, he said that they were aware of the weak snow near the ground and that No Name Bowl was prone to avalanching. Group dynamics played the biggest role in this accident as the lure of fresh powder and having fun with friends overrode their avalanche hazard decision making. This is a common theme when experienced backcountry travelers get caught.

Coordinates