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crevasse practice


johnnyt

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Back in the day I used to find a deep/steep roadcut with a good snow bank and throw myself off that and see if my sweetheart could arrest and pull me out... obviously look for one that has a moderate runout and a fair amount of snow along the side. I've been able to find one towards the upper lot at baker 2 for 2 and I'm sure there'd be something near snoqualmie pass. Just stay away from the freeway (or you'll look like a real tool...)

 

Good idea for a spring brushup. I think there are a fair number of people out there who think they know what they're doing because they did this excersise ten years ago but never since.

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wait till august, everything is buried.

nah, you can practice crevasse rescue in deep ass cracks on the nisqually in early summer - i remember training to ascend past sleds on a may trip there back in '03. a short approach from paradise parking lot too.

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Where is a good place with some open crevasses, maybe near seattle, that doesn't require hours of hiking, where one could dispose of a body, or, practice something or another?

 

The Easton glacier has a few gapers around the 6500 foot level by mid-May. However, it does involve a 2.5-3 hour hike.

 

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Years ago, and on several occasions, I practised in the Paradise parking lot (Mt. Ranier) on the big, steep snow banks around the parking lot. Since then, I have heard they don't allow this anymore as folks would inevitably lose biners in the snow which would then wreck the blades on their snow machines. Can any one confirm/deny if this is still allowed? Maybe worth a call to the ranger station.

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I was just up at Paradise last weekend with a small group for CR practice, there's a great vertical snow wall (15-20') right at the East end of the upper lot where the road continues towards Mazama Ridge. Worked out great.

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Ditto that for the paradise lot at Rainier. We were down there last weekend and were joking about how it would make a good crevasse rescue area. Looks like someone went ahead and did it! Plus you can get some great skiing or snowboarding in at the same time.

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You don't need a crevasse to practice the CR techniques, just someplace that you can set up an anchor and haul from. Though it wasn't effective for learning to build a deadman anchor my first CR course was taught on a gymnasium floor. This was great to learn the load-releasing hitches and pulley systems and how prusiks work in the whole system. Building a deadman is pretty basic and - do I dare say it? - simple, but the process of constructing and using the actual rescue system is what needs to be practiced. Before I even took a class I was tying a rope off to a tree and practicing in the backyard - though my backyard at the time was very conducive to this sort of thing. Of course, there's many ways to learn these techniques.

Edited by LostCamKenny
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