Report into Worst US Ski Avalanche Published

Report into Worst US Ski Avalanche Published

The report examines snowpack conditions, the route taken by the party, an account of the companion rescue, and a set of observations about group travel decisions that investigators say contributed to the scale of the tragedy.

It was one of the most loaded and unstable snow configurations the Central Sierra Nevada had seen in half a century.

The snowpack was unstable in general and then a huge storm hit.

See here for the full report released on Avalanche.org

“A strong winter storm moved through the area from February 15 through February 19,” the report states.

At the precise hour the avalanche ran, conditions were at their most extreme and importantly it was accompanied by very strong winds that loaded some slopes.

 “The avalanche occurred on a slope where the wind had redistributed the snowfall, piling it into drifts far deeper than the amount measured at nearby weather stations.”

We reported on the incident at the time on PlanetSKI:

It is the worst avalanche incident in the US since 1982 when seven people died in the Alpine Meadows Ski Resort near Lake Tahoe, in California.

The deadliest avalanche recorded in the US was in 1910 in Wellington, Washington, where 96 people were killed after a large avalanche swept two Great Northern passenger trains into a gorge.

In the February incident it has been revealed for the first time that initially the 15-person party was not a single group.

The report reveals that two groups were on guided trips to the Frog Lake Huts in the Castle Peak area on Donner Summit, Feb 15–17, 2026.

The groups were made up of 6 females with 2 guides, and another group of 3 males with 2 guides all from the same guide service.

On the morning of February 17, the members of these two guided groups from the same guide service were combined into a single group with four guides for the return to the trailhead.

At some point before the avalanche released, two members of the group fell behind.

Guide #4 in the back was assisting Client #11 with a ski binding toepiece issue.

That equipment failure, the report would later note, likely saved their lives.

The report draws on survivor testimony published by the New York Times on February 28, 2026, to reconstruct the moments of the avalanche itself.

“A ski guide in the group yelled ‘Avalanche’ and Client #10 looked up to see a wall of white with strange blurs of colors,” the report states, quoting the account in the New York Times.

“He realized that the colors were the tumbling skis and clothing of the other skiers. He dove behind a dead tree and was quickly buried by the avalanche debris.”

Client #11 and Guide #4, still behind with the binding repair, reached the rest of the group moments later and found a debris field.

They had not seen the avalanche occur.

The report also confirms for the first time that several members of the group were equipped with avalanche airbag backpacks.

None were deployed in this accident.

All 13 of the individuals caught in the avalanche were buried within the area outlined by the small yellow box.

Image c/o Sierra Avalanche Centre.

Image c/o Sierra Avalanche Centre.

The crown was never visible as new snow was filling it in even as the slide ran.

“The avalanche is believed to have been a soft slab of size D2 to D2.5 with the exact weak layer and bed surface unknown.”

It ran approximately 400 vertical feet, through trees at mid-path and below.

SAR responders estimated the debris field at 100 feet wide.

The most striking new material in the report is the step-by-step account of the companion rescue.

An account of how two people, one a guide and one a client, worked through a debris field in a blizzard with 125 mph wind gusts on the ridge above them.

Client #10 forced himself out from beneath the debris and shouted that people were buried, pointing to the last location he had seen his companions.

Guide #4 began a transceiver search.

Client #11 spotted a ski pole protruding from the debris surface, and it was moving.

He dug to find Client #9, who “had an airway along his arm and pole up to the snow surface and indicated he was not seriously hurt.

Guide #4 located Clients #8 and #7 via transceiver search and probe.

Both were initially excavated only enough to expose their faces.

“While digging for Client #7 they encountered the leg of another group member and the backpack of yet another group member.”

Continuing to dig, the group uncovered Guide #3 and Client #6.

Both were assessed as showing no signs of life.

The report notes that the group then redirected to fully excavate Clients #7 and #8, both assessed as injured.

A decision was made to move the six survivors downslope to a position away from the avalanche path.

“An emergency shelter was constructed by Guide #4, and care was given to Clients #7 and #8.”

Client #10 had placed a 911 call around 11:30 a.m., when the search began.

SAR teams were dispatched, including ski teams from the Castle Peak trailhead, and snowcat teams heading toward the Frog Lake Huts via the Tahoe Donner Cross Country Center.

Tahoe Nordic Search and Rescue reached the accident site at approximately 5:30 p.m.

By that point, roughly two feet of new snow had settled over the debris field.

SAR responders could only locate the edges and toe of the debris by the depth their boots penetrated the snowpack: on the debris, they could stand and walk.

Off the edge of it, they sank past the waist.

TNSAR members found the eight remaining buried victims that evening.

The report states they were “all buried 3 to 8 feet deep within a 20′ x 20′ area.”

All eight were confirmed dead.

The six survivors were then escorted, on skis, back up and over Red Dot Pass to the Frog Lake Huts, from where they were evacuated by snowcat to the Tahoe Donner Cross Country Center.

The ninth victim was not recovered until February 20, following a sustained mitigation operation using PG&E helicopters deploying approximately 5,500-pound, 660-gallon water buckets on the slope.

Image c/o Sierra Avalanche Centre.

Image c/o Sierra Avalanche Centre.

The final four victims were recovered on February 21.

The investigators offer four specific findings:

  • The binding failure which delayed Guide #4 and Client #11 may have been the reason both survived, and that their subsequent companion rescue directly saved lives: “2 of the 4 buried survivors required companion rescue to excavate the snow that covered their airways. The rapid location and excavation of these two individuals was lifesaving.”
  • This group traveled below avalanche terrain and through the runout zone of an avalanche path during a period when a natural or human triggered avalanche was likely to very likely.
  • The accepted best practice of “exposing only one person at a time to avalanche terrain” was not followed.
  • Group size mattered: “This group consisted of 15 people. Analysis of past avalanche accidents has indicated that larger group sizes (4 or more people) have higher chances of being caught in avalanches,” citing peer-reviewed research published in Wilderness & Environmental Medicine in 2016.

The report is direct about what remains unknown:

“Many of the details surrounding this accident and the events leading up to it remain unknown,” including human factors, decision-making, specific travel plans, and the precise mechanics of the avalanche itself.”

It notes that the account relies heavily on the testimony of two survivors who were near the back of the group and had no role in route planning.

Both the Nevada County Sheriff’s Office and the California Division of Occupational Safety and Health continue to conduct separate, active investigations into the incident.

No findings or charges have been announced.

See here for the full report released on Avalanche.org

The investigators make the following points:

  • All the fatal avalanche accidents we investigate are tragic events.
  • We do our best to describe each accident to help the people involved, and the community as a whole better understand them.
  • Many of the details surrounding this accident remain unknown, especially concerning human factors, decision making, travel plans, specifics of the avalanche, etc.
  • As more details emerge over time, more learning opportunities will present themselves.

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