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glenshee

February 21, 2007

Well things are pretty miserable here, the big melt happened last thursday and there is no sign of any significant snow on the horizon although its been trying to snow today.
We just have the Dink Dink and Claybokie going, Dink Dink is car park snow that we tractored in so your skis get well sanded on the way down really only suitable for first day beginners. Claybokie is patchey at the top with some soft snow moguls!!! and the last bit is manmade snow so its not too bad. Its keeping a few intrepide holiday makers happy.
On the casuality front few and far between; one stands out a 12 year old boy who hit a fence hurt his lower leg/knee and screamed the house down the whole time till the ambulance staff filled him with morphine. We tried entynox which actually knocked him out briefly which let us get the boots and trousers off but he didnt like it much. His mother was fantastic and kept calm through it all. Alan and I thought he had maybe #'d the tibial plateau but the the hospital could find nothing and thought he had torn ligaments or tendons.
Well hears praying for snow and looking forward to FIPS and loads of snow.
Cheers Kate

posted by BASP @ 12:05 PM  0 comments  

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Twas the week before Christmas when 7 eager recruits arrived at the bottom Gondola station of the Nevis Range keen to learn all that Jeff had to teach us about the art of Ski Patrolling. It was of course the annual Ski Patrol Training Course and our spirits raised by the slight fluttering of overnight snow we duly set of up the mountain to find out what was in store for us. For myself it was the next step up the ladder towards becoming a fully fledged National Patroller at Glenshee, others had far grander ladders, Tignes, Canada, even the Cairngorms!

A thoroughly worthwhile and entertaining week was had by all, learning everything from chairlift rescues to ice axe arrests including how not to find someone on a dark mountainside! Had it not been for Cat we’d still be looking!

First Aid featured highly on the agenda obviously, and I think Jeff should probably take up a sideline in the props department on a horror movie set to fully utilise his make up sklls. Euan may not be able to look at vegetable soup in quite the same way ever again, and Annie certainly gargled for the rest of the week! But it was all good practice and certainly built our confidence for going out onto the big white pistes.

A bit of avalanche training, some sledge work on the dry slope, a day playing/training with crampons and ice axes, and some worldly patrolling advice from our mentor Jeff later and we were thrown out into the big bad world of ski patrolling!

I fully recommend the course to anyone thinking about patrolling in the future, it provides a good start to the proccess and provides valuable insight into what the job intails.

Thanks to Jeff, Mark, Tony and all the guys and gals at the Nevis Range.

Pete Grewar

p.s. Thanks also to our sponsors: Gore-Tex, and the wee rubber bits on the point of your ice axe!!

posted by BASP @ 9:27 AM  0 comments  

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