It's getting cozy in the Bell 412 from Heli Tirol near Imst. The helicopter actually holds 13 people, but with the team from LWD Tirol, Austrian journalists with camera equipment and me, we quickly fill the flying minibus. The sight of the white peaks and inviting slopes after the first major snowfall of the winter is breathtaking. We fly over the Pitz and Ötztal valleys into the Stubai Valley.
Dream team with an international reputation
In front of the pilot is Paul Kössler, a qualified electrical engineer and technical director of the LWD for 15 years. Today, he will be maintaining two of the 200 weather stations that supply the LWD with 288,000 pieces of data every day. To my right, Rudi Mair and Patrick Nairz have long been busy with their work and are keeping a close eye on the terrain below us.
Dr. Rudi Mair has been head of the Avalanche Warning Service Tyrol since 1999: "When I started working for the avalanche warning service in 1990, there wasn't a single measuring station," explains Mair. Today, the Tyroleans are leaders in the development and implementation of new technologies and communication channels. They were the first to publish the avalanche situation report on the Internet and later via an app, and this winter they launched the world's first cross-border LLB with South Tyrol and Trentino with avalanche.report, which is also published the day before at 5 p.m. (Read more HIER) and since this winter have been the only warning service apart from the Swiss to use the SnowMicroPen© developed by the Swiss SLF - an exciting device, but more on that later.
Patrick Nairz had actually already finished his temporary traineeship at the LWD when the avalanche disaster in Galtür occurred in February 1999 and Mair urgently needed support. Since then, the two have been a well-coordinated team.