Saturday, December 20, 2025
ADVT 
National

B.C. Snowmobiler Captures Harrowing Video Of Being Buried Alive In Avalanche Near Sicamous

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 08 Apr, 2015 10:15 AM
    SICAMOUS, B.C. — Taking all the right precautions was nearly not enough for a snowmobiler who was buried in an avalanche during a trip through the mountains of B.C.'s Interior.
     
    Curtis Johnson, 52, captured harrowing video from a helmet-mounted camera of spinning in a sea of white powder during a sledding trip with three friends near Blue Lake, between Sicamous and Revelstoke, late last month.
     
    The seasoned sledder was carrying all the right equipment and had read the snow conditions, but that fell short of keeping him out of trouble.
     
    "It hit me so fast," said the Sicamous native in an interview. "All I knew was that I was tumbling because it was dark and then light and then dark and then light.
     
    "It really shows you how much power those avalanches have because that wasn't even a big one."
     
    The video shows Johnson rocketing up a steep, tree-lined slope when the snow immediately ahead gives way and engulfs both him and his machine.
     
    "I saw the avalanche coming and all I thought was I'm going to jump and swim," said Johnson, describing how he tried to leap from his sled to keep from getting hit or dragged down by his 200-kilogram machine.
     
    Moments later the camera is still.
     
     
    Johnson said most of his body was cemented in place by the heavy snow, but that he was able to use his left arm to dig an air hole in front of his face.
     
    "I was just kind of scared," said Johnson, who works as a welding supervisor in Sicamous and began sledding in the mountains nearly 15 years ago.
     
    "I was breathing super hard and I had a balaclava over my face. I figured I'd be OK but it's hard to tell your mind that."
     
    Within three minutes his friends — all seasoned snowmobilers as well — had used their snow shovels to free him.
     
    After digging out his snowmobile and breaking for a quick bite of lunch, Johnson was back on the slopes for another hour before calling it a day.
     
    "I kind of felt wimpy after doing that," he said, laughing, though he added that he was "a little more wary of the hills."
     
    Johnson said he now plans on buying an avalanche bag, a backpack that inflates during a snow slide and lowers the chances of being buried.
     
    Otherwise, he said there is nothing he would do differently and he is looking forward to the rest of the snowmobiling season.
     
    His advice to other sledders: take an avalanche course, carry a beacon and a probe and do not sled when conditions are bad.
     
     
    More than 10 people are killed on average every season in avalanche-related deaths in B.C., according to a report from the province's corners service, the majority of those are snowmobilers.
     
    So far this season three of the four people who have died in avalanches were on snowmobiles, said a spokeswoman for the coroners service.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Wireless Cameras Put Bird's-Eye View Of Mating Stanley Park Herons Online

    Wireless Cameras Put Bird's-Eye View Of Mating Stanley Park Herons Online
    VANCOUVER — Ecologists have mounted wireless cameras in Vancouver's Stanley Park, transporting the public straight into the nests of the region's Pacific great blue heron — and with it comes a close-up of intimate birdie behaviour.

    Wireless Cameras Put Bird's-Eye View Of Mating Stanley Park Herons Online

    BC Anti-Gang Police Unit Busts Major Drug Pipeline After 7-Month Chilliwack-Based Crime Probe

    BC Anti-Gang Police Unit Busts Major Drug Pipeline After 7-Month Chilliwack-Based Crime Probe
    SURREY, B.C. — B.C.'s anti-gang police unit says it has busted a major drug pipeline in connection with a Chilliwack-based crime group.

    BC Anti-Gang Police Unit Busts Major Drug Pipeline After 7-Month Chilliwack-Based Crime Probe

    BC Residents Fined $28.8 Million In Stock Manipulation Scheme By BCSC panel

    BC Residents Fined $28.8 Million In Stock Manipulation Scheme By BCSC panel
    In September 2014, the panel found that between September 2007 and March 2009, Thalbinder Singh Poonian, Shailu Sharon Poonian, Robert Joseph Leyk, Manjit Singh Sihota and Perminder Sihota manipulated the share price of OSE Corp.

    BC Residents Fined $28.8 Million In Stock Manipulation Scheme By BCSC panel

    BC Ferries Commissioner Proposes Fare Hike Of 1.9 Per Cent A Year For 4 Years

    BC Ferries Commissioner Proposes Fare Hike Of 1.9 Per Cent A Year For 4 Years
    VICTORIA — The commissioner of BC Ferries has proposed fare increases capped at 1.9 per cent for four years — from April 2016 to March 2020.

    BC Ferries Commissioner Proposes Fare Hike Of 1.9 Per Cent A Year For 4 Years

    Accused B.C. Terrorist Hoped Attack Would Help 'Brothers' In Afghanistan

    Accused B.C. Terrorist Hoped Attack Would Help 'Brothers' In Afghanistan
    The trial for John Nuttall and Amanda Korody is listening to audio secretly recorded by police on July 1, 2013, after the couple planted homemade pressure-cooker bombs on the legislature lawn.

    Accused B.C. Terrorist Hoped Attack Would Help 'Brothers' In Afghanistan

    19 Killed In Tunisia Museum Attack, Including 17 Foreign Tourist

    19 Killed In Tunisia Museum Attack, Including 17 Foreign Tourist
    At least 19 people, including 17 tourists, were killed and over 20 others injured when gunmen attacked a museum in Tunisia's parliament complex here on Wednesday, according to media reports. Two of the terrorists were later killed.

    19 Killed In Tunisia Museum Attack, Including 17 Foreign Tourist