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PowderGuide team meeting | Start of the new season

The PG team prepares for the season

by PowderGuide 09/26/2020
How did the stable lateral position work again? What about the 2020/21 PowderGuide season? Will our tent stay waterproof even in heavy rain? These were the central topics of this year's PG core team meeting.

The PG team is scattered across the Alpine region and mostly communicates remotely - we were already fully in control of working from home and video conferencing before coronavirus. But because it's simply nicer to sit around a table together and exchange ideas over a coffee, a beer or even the odd schnapps, we regularly meet up in person, do something seasonal together and discuss what's coming up in the near future.

At the moment, it's the start of the new season for PowderGuide.com and, of course, for each and every one of us - after all, we're all personally looking forward to the first days of skiing. This year, we combined self-interest and the annual team-building measure and took an outdoor first aid course together, which - this much in advance - we can only warmly recommend to PG readers.

Stable lateral position on the Isar

As with many things that you should actually do much more often (avalanche transceiver training!!), it's also the case with first aid courses that everyone has done one at some point and everyone agrees that it might be good to do one again, but it's still not easy to get yourself to do it. Especially if you'd rather spend the weekend outside than in a stuffy seminar room in the local community center practicing how to remove a motorcycle helmet from dolls. Fortunately, in addition to the classic, indoor EH course, there are also completely different course formats, as demonstrated for us by Carsten - a passionate trail runner and ski tourer who is also a medical instructor for the Bavarian Mountain Rescue Service and an emergency doctor.

After a few basics (what exactly was that again with the recovery position?) on an idyllic gravel bank by the Isar, it's quickly time for case studies. Carsten takes a few steps into the forest with a volunteer "victim" to discuss a scenario that we then have to solve as a group.

After five minutes, Carsten comes back alone. Desperate, he calls for help: An accident! His comrade has crashed! We go to check and find PG splitboard editor Patrick on a steep slope, unconscious and wrapped around a tree.

The initial slight disconcertment at the staged catastrophe (Patrick is of course not really unconscious, Carsten not really desperate) quickly gives way to genuine adrenaline. How do we get Patrick out of here? It's steep, the forest floor is slippery, sharp branches everywhere. Damn! If the unconscious Patrick stops breathing, we have no chance of reviving him here! The main thing is to somehow get him onto the path where he can lie down!

The three of us drag Patrick through the bushes - one by the shoulders, two by one leg each - and heave him onto the hiking trail. A quick look at Carsten - is that enough? Carsten doesn't react. OK, let's continue: Patrick is placed in the recovery position and wrapped in a rescue blanket. We've already made the fictitious emergency call. What now? Keep checking his breathing. But above all, wait for help to arrive. Carsten is still not responding. It's getting tedious. Checking his breathing again, talking to Patrick reassuringly, even though he's unconscious. Finally Carsten nods: "OK, you can stop. Maneuver briefing!"

Phew. Although it was only an exercise, we realized a few things: The general uncertainty. The strange group dynamic until someone decides where to go. The stupid feeling when you join in even though you actually have reservations. The helplessness when you can do nothing but wait. Carsten asks how the "victim" and the rescuers fared during the scenario. He points out suboptimal communication and, above all, that unconscious people who have obviously crashed should be transported carefully. Oh, crap. That's actually obvious!

A little slower, but more thoughtful: Patrick patiently sacrifices himself again, lies down on the same tree and we try a second time, this time with a bivouac sack for transportation. It takes a little longer until we agree on how to get him onto it and then carry on. But we get Patrick on his way without him dragging on the ground and sustaining further injuries as a result of the ungentle "rescue".

Exercise brings routine

After a few more emergency scenarios, group communication works more smoothly and we react better overall and with more routine. Carsten emphasizes: "Especially in critical situations, you have to be aware that sometimes there's nothing you can do except wait for the rescuers and talk the victim through it. The latter may feel strange for the rescuers, especially if the victim is unable to converse normally. For the victim, however, human attention is still very important - preferably from one person who only cares, and not from 5 people all talking to the victim at the same time.

At the end of the day, we are exhausted but confident that we are better prepared for emergencies on the mountain than before. On the one hand, because of the repeated basics that you learn on a first aid course. But above all, because we actively dealt with different emergency scenarios and realized that it's not all that complicated if you stick to certain rules.

We can highly recommend outdoor first aid courses with your own crew! With the courses offered by Dani Hornsteiner (and Carsten), you can also make specific requests and go through exactly the things that are particularly important for your own activities on the mountain.

Stay calm!

We also apply one of Carsten's principles to the team meeting: First take a deep breath and get an overview. Like many other companies, PowderGuide has been affected by the coronavirus crisis and the uncertainties are also affecting the PG team. The outdoor industry in general and the ski industry in particular are worried about the coming winter: Will the season start as usual? Will the ski resorts open and will they stay open? What if there are no tourists? Personally, we can switch to ski touring if the resorts close, but PowderGuide.com needs advertising partnerships to keep the site running. Many companies are understandably cautious in this regard at the moment.

We are all the more pleased about the partners who will be back in 2020/21! These pledges and the commitment of the PG team will also enable us to start the season as usual.

If the coronavirus measures are tightened again and the winter season is very bad, it may also be difficult for PowderGuide to maintain normal operations. But we do not want to and do not have to assume this at the moment and the PG team now has enough experience in operating PowderGuide.com to cope with the one or other unforeseen difficulty.

We're looking forward to a new season with you, to the first early-season CRs, to lots of exciting content and editorial features, and of course to the first real snow!

And yes, our team meeting tent withstood the heavy thunderstorm at the campsite in the evening with flying colors.

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This article has been automatically translated by DeepL with subsequent editing. If you notice any spelling or grammatical errors or if the translation has lost its meaning, please write an e-mail to the editors.

Show original (German)

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