Abstract

Avalanches represent the primary risk of death to backcountry skiers and snowmobilers in North American and European alpine countries. The best strategy for evading dangerous snowpack conditions that may result in an avalanche event requires skiers and snowmobilers to avoid or mitigate their use of hazardous terrain. Therefore, understanding terrain use is critical to understanding the causes of avalanche accidents. Secondary, post-event examination of accident data is inadequate for this understanding, and the logistical costs of user intercept surveys are problematic. Learning more about the behaviors and practices skiers and snowmobilers use to avoid avalanche fatalities or near misses is the primary concern of the avalanche education and research community. However, the topographical data required for analysis of skier and snowmobiler behavior with respect to terrain use is beyond the capacity of most backcountry skiers to provide via traditional surveys. This paper presents the use of a novel combination of user surveys and Global Positioning System (GPS) tracking to collect detailed terrain-use data from recreationists who voluntarily engage with researchers via active participation in citizen science research projects. We describe the methodology for these observations and present why they represent an effective approach to understand avalanche accidents.

Highlights

  • Backcountry skiing and snowmobiling are rapidly growing (Birkeland et al 2017) risk-laden sports that take place in alpine mountain settings

  • We suggested that several barriers, including technological and sociological ones, may exist that could preclude successful data collection

  • We suggest that the use of citizen science methods to combine online surveys with Global Positioning System (GPS) tracking and post-trip surveys allows for insight into appropriate decisions about terrain use by backcountry skiers, and such analysis can provide insight into desirable behaviors

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Backcountry skiing and snowmobiling are rapidly growing (Birkeland et al 2017) risk-laden sports that take place in alpine mountain settings. A typical backcountry ski tour consists of a small group of enthusiasts traveling to a ski tour destination after acquiring the detailed avalanche forecast (if available) from an avalanche forecast center in their region They would assess their tour plan and make their way to the ski destination—typically a snowfield or alpine summit from which they would determine a descent route based on snowpack stability. The route both up and down would be contingent on multiple factors including ongoing group discussion of weather, time and distance, risk assessment of terrain and snowpack, and group expertise and level of risk aversion. With a high level of skiing ability honed at developed ski areas, readily embrace backcountry skiing as a way to expand their skiing experience but often do so with little to no understanding of backcountry hazards

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call