Two Crazy Incidents with Thankfully Good Outcomes
To begin, the stunning photographs and first hand account on TetonAT make John Griber's survival of a serac fall on Everest quite gut-clenching. Few of us have the opportunity to witness an avalanche of that size, much less be a speck upon the glacier immediately below the falling snow.
By chance, he was clipped in to a fixed line and behind a serac relative to the avalanche, and he believes this saved him. Thank goodness.
Then, two climbers were reported to have been saved by a propeller after being caught in an avalanche on Wester Ross Peak in Scotland. The plane providing the propeller wreckage had crashed into the mountain in 1951, killing the eight crew aboard.
The roped team crashed into and then hung from the propeller as the avalanche passed over them. They named their newly ascended route Bruised Violet in honor of the color that the propeller inflicted upon one of their arms.
Jane Candlish of The Press and Journal quotes the Scottish Avalanche Information Service co-ordinator, Mark Diggins:
It is astonishing to think that those men lost their lives on that plane and yet it saved someone’s life in the future.