Today was the day,
we were going to go heli. We drove about 70km north of Wanaka to
the site and got ready to ride. All of us got fitted with avalanche
transcievers and then we talked a bit about the weather conditions.
A storm front was approaching and there was a possibility that we
would have to cut our day short. The first group took off in the
Heuey D500 and the rest of us waited around for our turns. The
helicopter only holds five people including the pilot so that means
that there were only three riders and a guide on each trip up. When
getting to the top it was quite nerve-racking to see how small the
people were against the mountain. Exiting the heli and staying down
until it was gone was quite the experince because you’re on top of
a mountain and the rotor draft is blasting snow at you. We then got
together and our guide took us down the slope and into a gun barrel
(ravine). I had a mess of the first run because I was so nerveous I
was shaking. We waited at the bottom for the heli to pick us up and
then did two more runs before lunch. I did much better on those two
runs and I really was enjoying riding the fresh powder. In fact,
I’ll have to say that was the best damn day of riding I’ve ever
done (once I got over the nervousness and trepidation). The
distances we ran were pretty incredible. We not only did a lot of
vertical distance, but also a good bit of horizontal. The first run
after lunch, my fourth, was the one that did me in. I was so worn
out I had trouble staying up and traversing. Once I got to the
bottom I called it quits and waited for the heli to ferry me out to
the base. While waiting I was watching other riders way up on the
slopes. I saw a group of snowboarders shooting to the left on a
ridge and right behind them was an avalanche (the first of the day,
and we hadn’t seen signs of any others at all). It apparently had
split in two on the ridge just then we saw the other half come up
on their right. It was a pretty scarry sight. If the ravine we were
in had been more loaded with snow it could have continued down to
where we were waiting, but it didn’t. Later people went by the
fracture point and said it was about four feet of snow that slid.
One guy got tumbled in it when he set it off, but he ended up under
a rock ledge and was okay. No one got hurt or buried and so it was
a damn fine day.