Forums | Greg Hill and Glen Plake Survive Massive Avalanche

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Greg Hill and Glen Plake Survive Massive Avalanche

UserPost

7:42 am
September 24, 2012


powder

Nelson

Member

posts 199

Post edited 9:02 pm – September 24, 2012 by powder


Our hearts go out to those who have died.


This from Powder Canada:

A massive avalanche struck Manaslu, the world’s eighth-highest mountain, in Nepal shortly before 5 a.m. this morning, sweeping through teams of climbers and skiers camped at 7000 meters, including Greg Hill and Glen Plake, both of whom survived. Eleven people have been confirmed dead and as many as six are still missing, among them Plake’s teammates Rémy Lécluse and Greg Costa. Reports that Eric Hjorleifson was on Manaslu were untrue; the skier currently is in Canada.

Hill reported on his Facebook page, "A huge avalanche swept through camp 3 at 4:45am on Manaslu, catching lots of people in their sleeping bags, many dead, and injured. Luckily our team is fine, and helped with the rescue, Glen Plake is also fine but my heart goes out to all the others…"


Greg Hill Massive Avalanche

International Mountain Guides has a crew on the mountain and reported that the slide was caused by a serac fall, which was confirmed by Italian mountaineer Silvio Mondinelli. 

"IMG Manaslu leader Mike Hamill reports that about 4:30am (local time) a serac fell triggering a slide that hit Camp 3. The IMG team is at Camp 2 and they are all safe and sound. Mike and several other guides are now responding to Camp 3 to assist. We’ll be waiting for more info."

Garrett Madison, a guide with Alpine Ascents Internation, told Outside, "We counted 11 total deceased or missing," wrote Madison. "We were able to assist the French and German survivors some who were in pretty bad shape. We made a heli-pad and coordinated a rescue and evac’d about 15 people, and a few bodies. A lot of gear and a few bodies are still up there as the clouds moved in mid day."

Plake was swept nearly a thousand feet in his tent, was banged up and lost teeth, but was otherwise okay.

"Greg [Costa] and I were in a tent together, Rémy was in another. It was 4:45a and I was in my sleeping bag with my headlamp on reading my devotional when we heard a roar. Greg looked at me and said, "That was a big gust of wind," then a second later, "No, that was an avalanche."

Then it hit us.

I was swept 300 meters over a serac and down the mountain and came to a stop still in my sleeping bag, still inside the tent. We all went to sleep with avalanche transceivers on so I punched my way out of the tent and started searching.

Searched for 10 minutes when I realized I was barefoot.

Greg was using my down suit for a pillow and I found my suit, I found everything that was in my tent – camera, sleeping bag, ski boots, it was like someone had thrown my gear in the back of a pickup – but there was no sign of Greg. Rémy and his tent are nowhere to be found."

The Associated Press reported that with the start of the fall Himalayan climbing season 231 people were on Manaslu, though nowhere near that many were at Camp 3.

Reports are conflicting. The AP reported that a German, Nepali, and Spaniard were among the dead and that 10 injured climbers were rescued and flown by helicopter to Kathmandu, according to pilot Pasang, including three French and two Germans. However, Agence France-Presse said that 13 people were rescued and five were evacuated to the capital. 66-year-old Italian Alberto Magliano, who completed the Seven Summits, was among the dead, team member Silvio Mondinelli reported.

"Most of the dead people are French," the AFP quoted Ang Tshering Sherpa, vice-president of the Nepal Mountaineering Association, after speaking to expedition members at base camp by satellite telephone.

Alpine Ascents reported, "During the rescue & recovery in the following hours we were able to coordinate and assist evacuating over a dozen climbers on 10 helicopter flights from just below Camp 3 (20,500’). Lakpa Rita Sherpa coordinated much of the helicopter evacuation by speaking directly to the pilot and supervising the packaging and transportation of patients to our makeshift helipad on the debris field. Currently our group is now in base camp and planning to rest for a few days. Garrett Madison, Expedition Leader."

Plake, Lécluse, and Costa were attempting to be the first to ski 26,759-foot Manaslu without supplemental oxygen. Hill’s team, which includes Benedikt Böhm and Sebastian Haag, had originally planned to ski Cho Oyu, the world’s sixth-highest mountain, but was forced to abandoned their attempt when the Chinese government closed access to foreigners. They then shifted to Manaslu.

The peak is one of the more deadly of the world’s tall mountains. Through 2008, there had been 297 summits and 52 deaths. Manaslu’s worst disaster came in 1972, when an avalanche on the northeast side of the mountain killed 15 in a South Korean expedition, 10 of whom were Sherpas.

Greg Hill Massive Avalanche

5:37 pm
September 24, 2012


skifreak

Member

posts 217

Here is some updated info from the adventure journal:

glan plake greg hill Manaslu Avalanche

Debris field on Manaslu. Photo: Garrett Madison/Alpine Ascents International


UPDATE, Monday, September 24, 00:21 EST

Search resumed for victims of the Manaslu slide on Monday morning, the Himalayan Times reported. Three helicopters flew over the debris field at 6 a.m. before being pushed back by bad weather. Eighteen injured climbers are receiving treatment.


UPDATE, Monday, September 24, 10:00 EST

The search for survivors has been cancelled, French authorities announced at a press conference in Chamonix. "The rescue teams feel they did all they could to find further victims, but they have now given up all hope of finding any more survivors. The search has been called off for good," said Jean-Louis Verdier, deputy mayor, and Christian Trommsdorff, director of the French guides association, EpicTV reported.


UPDATE, Monday, September 24, 10:31 EST

EpicTV editor Trey Cook talks to CNN about his post-slide Glen Plake interview. 


Remembering 66-year-old Alberto Magliano, second Italian to complete Seven Summits, who was killed. 


Quebec cardiologist among the missing. 


BBC has a small gallery of images from Manaslu. 


UPDATE, Monday, September 24, 16:15 EST


Nepal’s Tourism Ministry has identified the eight of the victims whose bodies have been retrieved:


Marti Gasull, 43, Spain


Fabrice Priez, Chamonix, France, mountain guide


Catherine Marie Andree Ricard, Chamonix, France


Ludovic Paul Nicholas Challeat, Chamonix, France, mountain guide


Philippe Lucien Bos, France


Christian Mittermeyer, Germany


Alberto Magliano, Italy


Dawa Dorji, Nepal


Still missing are Rémy L´Cluse and Greg Costa of France and Dominique Ouimet of Canada, plus three others not identified.

3:32 pm
September 25, 2012


powder

Nelson

Member

posts 199

A new today update form the Calgary Herald:


Revelstoke adventurer Greg Hill’s wife Tracey arrived at their home after a weekend of camping with their two small children to find 30 new messages on her answering machine.


The first one was from her husband, signalling that he had survived the avalanche that killed at least nine others on the Nepalese mountain of Manaslu Sunday. Hill phoned back two hours later via a satellite phone at base camp and chatted with his wife and his two young children. He and others at his camp escaped the avalanche, but they had found at least nine dead. Six others remain missing, including Quebec cardiologist Dominique Ouimet.


"He just kind of said he didn’t want to see another dead body for a long time," she said.


Hill, hired as a videographer with a Dynafit-sponsored expedition, is an accomplished backcountry skier with years of experience, and about a decade ago once rescued several friends from an avalanche near Rogers Pass, on the border with Alberta.


"It’s all about choices and sometimes there are better choices than others, thankfully Greg’s not a risktaker and he doesn’t take those unnecessary risks when he’s out there," she said.


Hill wrote on his Facebook page Sunday morning, "A huge avalanche swept through Camp 3 at 4:45 a.m. on Manaslu, catching lots of people in their sleeping bags, many dead and injured. Luckily our team is fine, and helped rescue, Glen Plake is also fine but my heart goes out to all the others."


The rescued U.S. skier, Glen Plake, told the website EpicTV that he was reading in a tent in a camp at 6,800 metres on Manaslu, the world’s eighth-highest mountain, at about 5 a.m. Sunday when he heard a roar.


Greg Costa, a friend and fellow skier who was sharing his tent, turned to him and said, "That was a big gust of wind," a second later adding, "No, that was an avalanche."


Plake told a reporter with EpicTV, "Then it hit us. I was swept 300 metres over a (ridge) and down the mountain and came to a stop still in my sleeping bag, still inside the tent, still with my headlamp on."


He punched his way out of the tent and started searching. "I started searching for 10 minutes before I realized I was barefoot."


Hill’s team, which was sleeping at a camp at 6,300 metres when the avalanche hit, moved up the mountain to pluck Plake from a crevasse and rescue others, according to EpicTV.


Hill’s cousin Magee Tabah described him as "extremely determined. He’s incredibly smart. He’s got an incredibly strong character. He’s a very caring, loving man who is an incredible, almost super-human athlete as far as skiing goes."


The Dynafit-sponsored expedition accompanying German speed climbers Benedikt Bohm and Sebastian Haag, who were attempting a speed climbing record to the summit of Mount Manaslu. Plake was part of a different skiing expedition on the mountain.


Before the avalanche, Hill had written about his experiences in the Himalayas on his website, http://www.greghill.ca.


"So far this has been an adventure unlike any I have been on in the past," Hill wrote on the blog, which is replete with stories of adventure of all kinds. "I have come to the Himalayas for my first time and am being blown away by the culture, the people, the mountains and the altitude."


To prepare for the Manaslu climb, he and 16 others climbed Mera Peak, a 6,476-metre mountain. During that expedition, he experienced headaches and nausea and described the incredible help offered by the Nepalese porters.


"They are the true heroes of any expedition through these mountains," he wrote.

In the blog, Hill describes the joy he derives from passing on his love of the mountains to his two kids on the ski hills, the sorrows he feels when he loses friends to accidents in the mountains and of the painstaking efforts he makes to plan ahead before expeditions to make them as safe as possible.


Read more: http://www.vancouversun.com/ne…..z27WVkiiKi