When he wakes up in the snow, his board is broken and hanging from his left foot, his right binding is still firmly tied to the present. My right foot is numb, now it is close to zero, I think he is Fahrenheit, and I can not find a soul anywhere. I saw another creature Zane Farrell guessed last time 6 hours ago. To his knowledge, he is located in Bull Hill, a local ski resort about 30 miles north of Bull Creek.
FATMAP provides a planning tool to investigate avalanche terrain with unprecedented detail and displays avalanche path, terrain trap, avalanche lamp over 30 degrees. Because that information is very rich and detailed, it will provide riders with a tool to put themselves in a complex and impactful avalanche's terrain. We are not as secure as we think of on the avalanche topography. The truth is that we are very fortunate many times. As a seed it is difficult for us to have an overly exaggerated view of our abilities. The bias of overconfidence means that we believe that our poor performance at the mission is not our nature. Therefore, we all believe it is very good to drive, karaoke songs and make good choices when traveling on avalanche terrain. One way we can help resist this bias is to impose rules on ourselves.
First of all, the avalanche has three main elements. Without an avalanche, you can not avalanche. 1) Snow 2) Slope 3) Snow is unstable. Secondly, there are two types of avalanche; flat snow and loose snow. The snow on the pine is small and usually does not exceed 20 miles per hour. A flat avalanche is a devastating and deadly mountain landslide. Destroying small towns and forests is not uncommon. Since the avalanche is not so dangerous, I will explain the avalanche. How these snow groups occur, whether to pay attention at the time of testing, and basic principles of comprehensive prevention