| It must be strange for the kids at the ski academy to know these parents died skiing. |
+1 I will not ski again due to Big Ski and how they treat people injured on their slopes. Hint: You will held responsible for their mistakes. |
This was not part of any resort. They are supposed to maintain a slope then don’t own or operate? |
Oof. This resonates with me due to several people I know. That’s exactly how they act. 😳 |
| I don't need stricter laws or skilled guides to warn me that if extreme weather and risk for avalanches has been predicted that I don't want to die encased in ice and smothering over a 30 minute time period. Not worth the risk for me or my loved ones. |
|
Story in NYT relaying account from two of the survivors (gift link): https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2026/02/28/us/tahoe-avalanche-survivors.html?unlocked_article_code=1.PlA.m9Z3.x4oSjjKcyO5_&smid=url-share
Puts all the decision-making onus on the guides. More stories to come, I'm sure. |
From a system failure standpoint, this is interesting. It's a feedback loop that encourages risky behavior.
|
+1 !! |
Blaming others when these folks are supposed to be highly intelligent, well-trained skiers with years of epertise and skiing opportunities. Didn't take the time to read weather reports? File lawsuits instead, of course. |
Thank you to that PP for the gift link. It was a beautifully written article. |
+1 Yes, and blame the guides. |
+1 |
See the excerpt from above. The guided picked a path that was "known" to be safe because it hadn't had avalanches in the past and was only 20 degrees instead of 30 degrees or greater, which poses an avalanche risk. https://avalanche.org/avalanche-encyclopedia/terrain/slope-characteristics/slope-angle/ Someone should probably measure the "safe" slope again. |
+1. Interactive features were a plus |
+1 And they should never have embarked on that ski trip when extremely severe weather and the probability of avalances had been predicted for a week. Foolhardy. |