Western View
Getting the message across
This winter the usual early-season
snows largely bypassed Whistler-
Blackcomb even as Victoria and
Vancouver suffered havoc. Extended cold, a
rain crust, a dangerous layer of faceted
crystals and lastly heavy wind-loaded
snowfalls created what avalanche expert Chris
Stethem later described as a once-in-30-years
“continental snowpack”—shallow and
dangerous, akin to the Alberta Rockies. “We
found ourselves in a very precarious situation,
[what some called] ‘bricks on [potato]
chips’,” said Doug Forseth, Whistler-
Blackcomb’s senior vice-president, operations,
in a recent telephone interview. “It’s been
very difficult to remedy. We have done a lot of
control work…but it hasn’t broken up that
unstable crust.”
Standard avalanche zones were subjected
to repeated ski cutting and explosives—yet
many failed to slide. In the near-backcountry,
killer slopes overhanging the normally popular
Blackcomb Glacier just hung there ominously.
But as more lifts opened and the base gradually
deepened, the region’s aggressive powderseekers
began venturing into the avalanche
terrain. At first with trepidation, then in
gradually increasing numbers. Eventually
hundreds of people descended the Blackcomb
Glacier. The skiing was getting better by the
day. Nothing bad was happening.
Then tragedy struck. On New Year’s Eve,
37-year-old Whistler local Dave Clark was
descending Ruby Bowl, accessed from
Blackcomb’s infamous Spanky’s Ladder
bootpack, when the slope ripped out. Skiing
alone, he was buried and died. Nobody
noticed. My close friend Kevin Damaskie and
I were just wrapping up a second fabulous
powder descent of the gentler Blackcomb
Glacier. Although we couldn’t see the slide
area, we likely passed beneath its path where
Clark was buried. The next day on Whistler a
snowboarder passed two Closed signs near the
Harmony chair and ducked a rope to get into
some nice powder. He triggered an avalanche
and was killed.
The tragedies unleashed a secondary
avalanche—of news media misreporting,
public hysteria and self-doubt among
experienced skiers. The airwaves were filled
with claims that the two victims—as well as
hundreds of others—had been skiing “out
of bounds.” But this term has no actual
meaning. What do you think it means?
For every person who replies “outside the
boundary,” another will say “closed” and
a third will say “against the rules or just
plain bad in some way,” giving the term
a moralistic odour. Yet there is no such
designation in Canadian skiing. Terrain
is “open,” “closed” or “outside ski area
boundary—ski at your own risk.”
I also witnessed self-contradiction
in important signage. Beside the top of
Showcase T-bar, a large fixed board describing
Blackcomb Glacier Provincial Park held two
flip-up (red-closed/green-open) signs—both
flipped up and green. About 30 metres to
the right ran the ski area boundary rope.
(Already, mixed messages.) Near the rope
were two hand-written signs describing
hazards and reiterating the ski-at-your-ownrisk
status—fair enough. But also beside the
rope was a large red octagonal sign reading
“CLOSED/Avalanche Hazard/Passes revoked
for violation.” Near this sign stood a pro
patroller. She informed my friend and me that
(paraphrasing from memory): The Blackcomb
Glacier is officially closed. But some people are
skiing it. We don’t recommend it. But we won’t
stop you.
Forseth said this kind of thing should not
have happened. Two days after the Ruby Bowl
accident, Blackcomb Glacier and Spanky’s
were officially and unequivocally closed—
ironically, placing them back “inside” the ski
area. (And those two “open” signs on the
fixed board were flipped down.)
It did seem to me that the mountain
was performing less avalanche control—as
well as much less grooming—than normal.
Was so much of the mountain designated
as beyond the ski area boundary because
the ski patrol couldn’t keep up with the
task? Forseth said this wasn’t so. “We do
more avalanche control than any ski area in
North America,” he noted. “We’re not doing
anything different in process than we’ve ever
done. We’re responding to conditions and the
hand we’ve been dealt.” He maintained that
his team was working flat-out to provide the
best achievable skiing experience during this
unusual convergence of thin snow cover and
persistent high avalanche hazard.
Forseth also denies local rumours of
operational cutbacks imposed from above.
“Our new CEO’s focus and commitment to
the guest experience is second to none.
We’ve been given the tools and resources to
deliver that. [We’re allocating] more money to
operational areas this year than in previous
years—whether it’s grooming, or patrol, all
those areas are getting the time and attention
the customer is looking for and we think they
deserve.” Everything that happened, Forseth
said, was driven by the specific circumstances
of this year’s snowpack.
Perhaps we skiers have come to demand
too much. Is it reasonable to feel entitled
to guaranteed fast openings of thousands of
hectares of rugged and consequential high-alpine
terrain, day after day, season after
season, regardless of conditions? Back in
the ’80s Blackcomb essentially introduced
double-black-diamond skiing to Canada, and
its pro patrol became legendary for pioneering
fast, aggressive opening of gnarly terrain
that in the Alps would have been left to a
few crazies and in North America would have
been permanently closed. By performing such
an amazing job, Whistler-Blackcomb set an
exceedingly high standard. Perhaps innately
hazardous terrain should never be “open”—
nor “closed”—but should remain “ski-at-your-
own-risk.” But in an era when avalanche
accidents generate a nationwide freak-out,
this is probably unrealistic.