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Tag: backcountry skiing

  • In Tahoe avalanche victims, skiers see moms who loved a risky sport

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    To skiers, California’s monster blizzard this week didn’t scare them off the mountains — it beckoned them. They flocked to Tahoe in eager anticipation, settling in before wind and snow snarled traffic and shut down the roads to the mountains.

    A group of eight close-knit friends were among the throngs of excited athletes. But after a devastating avalanche during the storm Tuesday, six of them, as well as three of the mountain guides they’d hired for an overnight backcountry ski trip, wouldn’t leave the mountains alive.

    Few details have emerged about the decisions that led the group — including a tight-knit group of moms and four experienced backcountry guides — to venture to the isolated slopes of Castle Peak when the weather was so dangerous. Skiers, however, could understand the draw. During a Sierra winter that brought too few powder days, the storm was welcomed enthusiastically.

    The victims were squarely within that community of serious mountain athletes. A statement from six of the grieving families said the ill-fated trip was planned well in advance by a group of close friends, “all of whom connected through the love of the outdoors. They were passionate, skilled skiers who cherished time together in the mountains.”

    Authorities rescued six people from the mountain Tuesday but have not yet identified the nine victims because conditions on the mountain have remained too dangerous to retrieve their bodies. Families have named six of the dead: Carrie Atkin, who lived near Tahoe; Liz Clabaugh of Boise, Idaho; her sister, Caroline Sekar, of San Francisco; and Danielle Keatley, Kate Morse and Kate Vitt, all of whom lived north of San Francisco in Marin County.

    It appears that at least some of their children were avid skiers, too. Kiren Sekar, Caroline Sekar’s husband, wrote in a statement to the New York Times that the pair had raised their children to love the sport. Sugar Bowl Resort confirmed that many of the people on the trip were connected with Sugar Bowl Academy, an elite ski and snowboarding preparatory school in Donner Pass. The school’s ski racers are perennial top competitors on high school circuits, according to people familiar with the sport, and graduates go on to ski at some of the top colleges in the country.

    For a group of friends who loved skiing and shaped a family life around it, the pain of this loss centers on a cherished place: near the school, Sugar Bowl and Donner Pass, a Sierra skier dreamland of high annual snowfalls, cozy lodgings and thrilling steep terrain.

    Sekar’s husband, Kiren, wrote in the statement that his wife had spent her final days “in her favorite place.”

    Snow falls at Sugar Bowl Ski Academy on Thursday, a few days after multiple people connected to the academy's competitive ski program were among those killed in the avalanche near Castle Peak.
    Snow falls at Sugar Bowl Ski Academy on Thursday, a few days after multiple people connected to the academy’s competitive ski program were among those killed in the avalanche near Castle Peak. HECTOR AMEZCUA hamezcua@sacbee.com

    Some of the victims of the Castle Peak avalanche: from left, Caroline Sekar, Carrie Atkin, Kate Vitt, Kate Morse and Danielle Keatley.
    Some of the victims of the Castle Peak avalanche: from left, Caroline Sekar, Carrie Atkin, Kate Vitt, Kate Morse and Danielle Keatley. Family photos

    Hush on the ski slopes

    With a dormitory and classroom building steps from chair lifts rising into Sugar Bowl’s 1,600 skiable acres of steep chutes, skiable bowls and glade tree skiing, the Academy is a training ground for skilled mountain athletes.

    “I look forward to seeing you at Sugar Bowl, the best place to do what we do,” the school’s director Stephen McMahon wrote in a Feb. 16 post to the school’s website, in which he cheered the falling snow and urged travel caution.

    By Thursday morning, as the blizzard continued with near white-out conditions, Sugar Bowl closed due to storm conditions and the academy’s buildings appeared empty. Cars and trucks in the parking lot were buried under feet of snow. There were no footprints leading in and out of the buildings, though with the storm’s intensity any trace of them would have been snowed under within minutes. No one came to the door when a Bee reporter and a photojournalist visited just before 9 a.m.

    While skiers and snowboarders in a parking lot just up the hill geared up, the swirling snow blanketed the school buildings in an eerie silence. That quiet was punctuated only by muffled bangs, as Sugar Bowl ski patrollers set off explosives in the peaks above to mitigate the danger of an avalanche inbounds at the resort.

    Five days prior, on Feb. 15, the group of friends and guides had set out into the backcountry on the other side of the pass under very different weather conditions. The sun was shining that Sunday, though the forecast said the blizzard that would dump feet of snow and develop highly unsafe avalanche conditions Monday. As predicted, the storm started hard, and snowfalls whose intensity surprised even longtime area residents continued throughout that night and into Tuesday, when the group began their exit from backcountry huts they had been staying in near Castle Peak.

    The group was skiing out of the widely-used backcountry area when the avalanche struck. It remains unclear if the avalanche came down on them from above, though officials said a member of the party saw the snow slide coming and had time to yell a warning before it reached them and buried most of the party. Six people survived, including four men and two women. Two of those people were hospitalized with serious injuries.

    At the Academy, in the Bay Area, in Idaho and in ski towns around the lake were an untold number of grieving loved ones. “We are heartbroken and are doing our best to care for one another and our families in the way we know these women would have wanted,” the families wrote.

    In a separate news release, the founder of Blackbird Mountain Guides, the company whose guides led the trip, expressed his own grief.

    “In addition to mourning the loss of six clients, we also mourn the loss of three highly experienced members of our guide team,” Zeb Blais said. “We are doing what we can to support the families who lost so much, and the members of our team who lost treasured friends and colleagues.”

    Since the avalanche, a chorus of questions has arisen — online and in ski shops and resort parking lots, among those who explore the backcountry on skis and those who don’t — about the group’s decision to carry on their trip in the face of the oncoming blizzard.

    At the same time, others in the skiing community have spoken up in defense of the tourers, noting that backcountry skiers take on avalanche risks nearly every time they set off into the backcountry. They try to minimize that risk through route selection, training and the use of safety gear like carrying location-transmitting beacons and collapsible, lightweight snow shovels to dig each other out should the worst occur.

    At 5 a.m. Tuesday morning, the Sierra Avalanche Center, which monitors the Tahoe area’s snowpack, had issued a high avalanche warning because of the rapid accumulation of new snowfall. “Natural avalanches are likely, and human-triggered avalanches large enough to bury or injure people are very likely,” that warning read. “Traveling in, near, or below backcountry avalanche terrain is not recommended during HIGH avalanche danger.”

    Skiers and snowboarders, including the professionals who examine the snowpack and forecast avalanche risks, do venture out into the backcountry during such periods of elevated risk. They can do so safely by staying far from any slopes steep enough to give way under them or send an avalanche down on top of them. It remains unclear how and why the group decided to start skiing out of the backcountry, or what route decisions they made before getting caught in Tuesday’s avalanche. Multiple investigations by different agencies are underway.

    Both Blais and the families of the six mothers emphasized that the skiers on the trip were no rookies. The skiers were trained in backcountry travel, trusted the professional guides they had chosen and carried the full suite of avalanche safety equipment.

    The mothers were experienced backcountry skiers, the statement said. They “deeply respected the mountains.”

    They were on an adventure.

    This story was originally published February 20, 2026 at 5:37 PM.

    Andrew Graham

    The Sacramento Bee

    Andrew Graham reports for The Sacramento Bee’s Capitol Bureau, where he covers the Legislature and state politics. He previously reported in Wyoming, for the nonprofit WyoFile, and in Santa Rosa at The Press Democrat. He studied journalism at the University of Montana. 

    Ariane Lange

    The Sacramento Bee

    Ariane Lange reports on regional transportation for The Sacramento Bee. She was a USC Center for Health Journalism 2023 California Health Equity Fellow. Previously, she worked at BuzzFeed News, where she covered gender-based violence and sexual harassment.

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    Andrew Graham,Ariane Lange

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  • Risking Their Lives to Ski While They Can

    Risking Their Lives to Ski While They Can

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    There’s something fundamentally excessive about winter sports. Instead of curling up with a book or Netflix when the weather turns cold, winter athletes wrestle with inordinate layers and high-tech gear just to make it through the day without frostbite. They sprint across ice with knives strapped to their feet and hurtle down mountains at speeds generally reserved for interstate highways. They fall off ski lifts—or are trapped overnight in them. Show me an experienced winter recreationalist, and I’ll show you someone who has slipped, skidded, and crashed their way to a broken tailbone or torqued knee, and more likely than not a concussion or two.

    But over the past few years, climate change, social media, and a pandemic-era obsession with the outdoors have combined to make these already intense sports even more extreme. Seasoned athletes have long considered bunny slopes and indoor ice rinks to be mere gateways to backcountry skiing (zooming through the tree line on untouched powder—and sometimes jumping out of a helicopter to get there) or “wild” ice skating over remote glaciers and freshly frozen lakes. Now a growing crowd of beginners has started to follow them—and the consequences can be fatal.

    Since the rise of remote work enabled an exodus from big cities in 2020 and 2021, a record number of people have visited U.S. ski areas each winter. Resorts can be so crowded that people wait 45 minutes for a chair lift that, four years ago, might have only had a three-minute line. No wonder skiers are searching farther and farther afield to get their fix. Greg Poschman, the county commissioner chairman of Colorado’s Pitkin County, told me that in just the past few seasons, he’s seen more people up in the backcountry and out on frozen lakes and rivers than he has in a lifetime living near Aspen. That sentiment is echoed by athletes and officials across the United States. All it takes is a sufficiently impressive stunt posted to social media, and once-deserted corners of the natural world will be inundated with hobbyists a few days later.

    In the wilderness, or even the “sidecountry” just outside resort bounds, athletes are exposed to dangers that are rare in more controlled settings. Miles from civilization, no one is policing the landscape for holes in the ice, buried rocks and twigs, and surprise cliffs, not to mention avalanches and ice dams. Perhaps most crucially, pushing out farther from roads and services means being farther from rescue when things go wrong. “You may be doing something that’s a low-risk sport”—ice-skating, snowshoeing, and the like—“but the consequences are very high,” Poschman said.

    Even sports that have never relied on curated resorts to thrive are becoming more treacherous. Kale Casey, a five-time Team USA co-captain for sled-dog sports, told me that unpredictable winter seasons are forcing teams away from traditional routes across Alaska that have become unsafe. Portions of the famous roughly 1,000-mile Iditarod race have been rerouted. Mushers are strategically running certain portions of races at night so their dogs—bred for temperatures around –20 degrees—don’t overheat. As the planet warms, and snow coverage of Alaska’s tundra contracts, other winter sports are converging with the mushers on the little snow that’s left. This season, five dogs have been hit and killed by people riding snowmobiles (known locally as snow machines); five more dogs were also injured in these collisions. “During the lockdown, there wasn’t a snow machine available in Alaska,” Casey told me. “Everybody bought them—and they’ve got to go places. Where do they go? They go where we go.”

    Climate change isn’t just pushing winter athletes into more crowded or remote territory. It’s also making that territory less predictable. From across the Northern Hemisphere, the near-identical refrain I heard went something like this: As recently as five years ago, the snow season used to begin sometime around Thanksgiving. It started slowly, with the odd storm or two, building up ice and snowpack gradually as temperatures fell. On a given day, you could be fairly certain of the quality of whatever frigid surface you were skiing on, climbing up, or skating over. And if the weather wasn’t good, well, the snow and ice would be there for you the next day.

    But now everyone I spoke with—whether in Iceland or in alpine California—said the first storms don’t come until January. The weather is unpredictable: Record-setting blizzards are interspersed with snow-melting rain. A dry early season followed by rain and wet snow is the perfect recipe for avalanches, Poschman said. Shannon Finch, who was an avalanche-rescue dog handler in Utah for 12 years before turning to heli-ski guiding, told me that even experts are now “perplexed, confused, and getting caught off guard” in environments they’d previously navigated with ease. Her dog, Lēif, struggled in these new conditions: When someone is buried by an avalanche, their scent is less likely to rise through wetter snow and warmer air temperatures. Consequently, Lēif needed to cover considerably more ground before making a rescue.

    The shorter seasons also create havoc for a uniquely human reason: FOMO. “People are chomping at the bit to get out there” and are willing to take greater risks for good snow or ice, Travis White, who runs a tourism fishing business in the Upper Peninsula of Michigan, told me. The result is that even a relatively leisurely activity such as ice fishing suddenly becomes an extreme sport. With fewer waterways icing over, more people from places that no longer freeze regularly are suddenly crowding onto just a few lakes. These newcomers aren’t around to watch the water slowly freeze; they don’t know where to watch out for eddies and currents that may make the ice unstable, or how to avoid the most recently frozen patches, which are also the most dangerous.

    Stories of ice fishers, figure skaters, and hockey players falling in—even dying—abound. Incidents on the snow are common too. Earlier this month, 23 people needed rescuing in Killington, Vermont, after ducking a boundary rope to ski and snowboard out-of-bounds on a particularly good powder day—the kind that’s getting vanishingly rare in the Northeast.

    White, like many of the other winter enthusiasts I spoke with, also blames social media for the extremification of his sport. Inexperienced ice fishers might see a cool spot posted on Instagram and find it easily, thanks to geolocation. The same goes for wild ice-skating, snowmobiling, and backcountry skiing. Athletes also worry that impressive, engagement-oriented stunts posted online could inspire inexperienced people to try extreme moves in those remote sites. “The only thing that I see on social media is people jumping off cliffs on their skis,” Ben Graves, a Colorado-based outdoor educator and an avid backcountry skier, told me. But only a tiny fraction of skiers who can find said cliffs are good enough to jump off them with something approximating safety.

    That fraction could soon get even smaller. Ívar Finnbogason, a manager at Icelandic Mountain Guides, is deeply concerned by the decline in skill he’s witnessed over the past decade. He stepped away from a career as an ice climber when he became a father, in part because of the danger but mostly because waiting and waiting for the right conditions meant that he simply couldn’t train effectively. “That’s no way for you as an athlete—as someone with ambition—to build up your momentum,” he told me.

    By the end of the century, snow and ice may be so scarce that only the most well-resourced and committed athletes can even attempt these new extremes. With just a degree or two Celsius more warming, much of the Northern Hemisphere can expect massive snow loss. If this happens, the only way to reach the snow might be with a helicopter or a days-long hike.

    A dramatic collapse in winter sports might well result in fewer accidents. But we would also lose something intrinsically human. For many winter-recreation devotees, these sports are more than just activities to pass the time. They are a way of life, dating as far back as 8000 B.C.E. Perhaps those who test their skills against the strength of Mother Nature have it right. Maybe now is the time for winter athletes to take their passions to dangerous new heights, before they lose the option forever.

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    Talia Barrington

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