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  • City & Region

    Man recovering at RIH tells how he survived avalanche

    A Fernie man who was buried for a short time beneath a wave of snow near Revelstoke will never forget the dread of trying to outrun the deadly avalanche.

    “It just broke the whole mountain loose. It just came down so fast. Nobody could move,” Ben Basaraba, 24, said Sunday.

    Basaraba, who is recovering from broken bones in his neck and an injured back in Royal Inland Hospital, was among the 200 snowmobilers who gathered for the annual Big Iron Shoot-Out in the Boulder Mountains near Revelstoke.

    He was eating when the wall of snow fell Saturday afternoon. He said he looked up and saw the avalanche overtake a group of 50 riders like a storm. Two people were killed.

    “The sound was just terrible,” he said, his voice quiet.

    Basaraba started his sled and looked back at the group of friends he came with. All he saw were people on snowmobiles being swept up by the snow.

    Everything happened in slow motion. He fled, but the avalanche kept coming. He said it grew bigger and moved faster with each passing second.

    There was a moment when Basaraba thought he would escape. He rode left, away from the snow, but it slammed into him anyway.

    “It was 30 feet high. It went right over all of us like we weren’t even there,” said Basaraba.

    Basaraba isn’t sure how long he was buried for. The top of his head poked out of the snow, so it didn’t take rescuers long to find him. But he couldn’t move and could see. He said the sensation was claustrophobic and terrifying.

    His rescuers left him on the snow while they freed others. He waited an hour before helicopters came to fly people out. He said it took half an hour before the aircraft landed and then another 30 minutes before he was airborne.

    Basaraba was flown to hospital in Revelstoke before being moved to RIH, where he spent the night in the emergency room. He was moved to a bed on the sixth floor Sunday.

    Basaraba said all of his friends survived. Some were buried like him, but soon freed.

    He will spend at least a week in hospital, but is expected to make a full recovery. He said the ordeal has turned him off snowmobiling — a sport he’s done off and on for years — for good.

    “I’ve got a cheap sled for sale,” he said, and tried to smile despite his swollen face.

    He said he was aware of the avalanche danger, but drawn to the event because of the promise of good snow. He hasn’t been able to snowmobile much in Fernie this year.

    Organizers of the Big Iron Shoot-Out had camera crews recording the activity. Basaraba believes that’s enough to convince anyone to ride despite the risk, he said.

    Basaraba grew up in Creston and loves the outdoors. He is a welder at a mine in Sparwood.

    His parents arrived in Kamloops to see him Sunday.


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    Comments

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    LilyJean says...

    Sell insurance! If you have it, you dont have to pay to be rescued! If you dont, you pay the cost of all related help! This whole story is about money not safety! People that want to be stupid will continue, without any care, until it hurts them financially! The cost to monitor the new regs will be put on the back of all Canadians and not the idiots that seek adrenaline!

    Posted on March 18, 2010 @ 12:50 am PST | Report post to Editor | 3500283 

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    Sacha73 says...

    Further to my last comment, CBC.ca has an article quoting a Calgary lawyer saying that the Province might be sued as a result of this incident (which was neither an accident nor a tragedy). That's right - somehow the Government of BC should have done more to keep these idiots safe.

    What's that sound? Oh, it's the sound of a hammer hitting another nail in the coffin of personal responsibility.

    Posted on March 17, 2010 @ 7:32 am PST | Report post to Editor | 3492628 

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    menthelius says...

    Look on the bright side, for every idiot that dies doing something stupid/illegal, the gene-pool grows that much stronger.

    Evolution at work, Nature hates idiots.

    Posted on March 15, 2010 @ 11:37 pm PST | Report post to Editor | 3481163 

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    BenDover says...

    Kash Heed is talking about a new law effective Nov./ 2011 for all rec vehicles. (probably license / registration / safety course,etc.) BUT the big thing will be "enforceability" and that is impractical in the back country. However, if unsanctioned events like this are held and people require rescue,recovery,medical care, etc, THEY should have to pay...either for the service or extra medical premiums for "extreme activities" ,also goofs that go out-of-bounds skiing. How many people are in this province or country ? What percentage engage in high-risk activities ? Not that many, so why should the average taxpayer foot the bill for their hobbies ?....user pay. Hit people where they will feel it most, their wallet.

    Posted on March 15, 2010 @ 7:16 pm PST | Report post to Editor | 3480167 

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    Sacha73 says...

    Darwin Strikes Again.

    This would be fine, if it wasn't for the fact that our tax dollars get doled out for the recovery costs and, more importantly, our first responders' lives are put at risk because some 200 idiots choose to ignore the "Extreme" avalanche warnings.

    What's worse is seeing the human cry on some other news sites (i.e. CBC) that the government "should have done more" to stop this and/or make the mountain safer and/or look for someone "responsible". Grouchy, you and I have exchange posts in the past on this type of subject, and I hate to say it, but my point may be proven. Unless the participants step up to the plate and say, "It's my fault, no one else's", the nanny-state will have no choice but to intervene. And intervene they will, once the inevitable law suits naming the town of Revelstoke, the RCMP etc. get filed.

    Posted on March 15, 2010 @ 6:00 pm PST | Report post to Editor | 3475810 

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    BenDover says...

    You nailed it, Donna...

    Posted on March 15, 2010 @ 2:54 pm PST | Report post to Editor | 3474954 

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    Dcrossman says...

    Now that I live in Calgary, I find the attitude of Albertans is one of it will never happen to me... I have the right to do any sport or type of sport, BC law does not apply to me....
    Each day I read the Herald and the Kamloops News, I stand firm in my beleif that most young people involved in dangerous sports have no regard to the people they leave behind if they die, the cost to the ones they love if they are paralized or even the ones left to pay the costs for their recuse while putting those people in danger. Their lack of responsibility leaves me to think - these if they survive are the ones to look after us or make the rules in the future.....
    Donna

    Posted on March 15, 2010 @ 11:31 am PST | Report post to Editor | 3474927 

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    Grouchy says...

    I have to agree with you Ben.I'm sorry the guy is hurt , but people have to start taking responsibility for their actions. As sad as all this is , the survivors should be presented with a bill for the rescue efforts. the warnings were clear and loud and on all the newscasts and I imagine many other places too. Yet they went ahead with their rally.

    Posted on March 15, 2010 @ 10:17 am PST | Report post to Editor | 3474912 

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    BenDover says...

    Some fun, huh, Bambi ? I guess all the warnings from the CAC were spot on. Too bad the organizers never paid attention.As usual, the taxpayers will foot the bill.

    Posted on March 15, 2010 @ 8:41 am PST | Report post to Editor | 3474887 

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