Saturday, January 10, 2015

AIARE 1 Course

So I spent the weekend with the Mountaineers up at Mt. Baker for an AIARE 1 (Avalanche Education) course. The weather was cloudy, about 34 degrees and snowed lightly off and on. Visibility was very limited and the amount of snow on the mountain was unseasonably low. But there was enough to demonstrate the concepts of reading terrain, traveling safely, beacon searches, avalanche hazards and making observations including looking at different layers in the snow pack.


We had tons of fun with our group. We all had snowshoes, except our two instructors who were on back-country skis. That was good to learn how to travel with skiers, since they often can't travel the same paths as snowshoers. We got to plan our own destination and figure out how we would travel avoiding specific avalanche hazards and choosing terrain wisely and route finding in near white-out conditions.


In the end, I learned a lot about avalanche dangers, how to spot avalanche conditions, how to trip plan effectively, how to travel in safe terrain and how to respond in an emergency situation. I had a lot of fun and got to meet some great people. The only thing I could have hoped for was better weather and snow conditions. But you can't control that.


As always check out all the photos from the hike and every hike by clicking on the "Photos" tab.

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