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Daily Record
Daily Record
National
Mike Merritt

Ben Nevis climber killed after horror 2,000ft plunge in avalanche as friend seriously injured

A climber has been killed in an avalanche on Ben Nevis - the first such white death in Scotland in nearly three years. The 49-year-old man was with a fellow climber on the UK's highest mountain when they plunged nearly 2,000 feet on the 4,413ft high mountain's north face.

The other climber, 42, miraculously survived but suffered serious injuries. Nearly 40 rescuers from Lochaber and Glencoe mountain rescue teams were sent after the alarm raised around 3.30pm on Friday.

The pair, both UK based, were were a group of four on Number Two Gully, and the other two raised the alarm. But Donald Paterson, leader of Lochaber Mountain Rescue Team, said the initial information was "patchy".

He said: "It appears they were near the top and their weight made a cornice [an overhanging ledge of snow] give way and that triggered the avalanche. The wind conditions meant that the helicopter couldn't get in so the teams found the pair on top of the snow and stretchered them off the mountain.

"They must have fallen 600 metres (1968ft) and the chap who survived was very lucky. Though badly injured, he dodged a bullet while his friend didn't. Sadly, so often, that is the luck of the draw. We wish to extend our condolences to the deceased's family and friends at this difficult time."

The teams managed to wrap-up the incident around midnight and the injured man was taken by ambulance to the Belford Hospital in Fort William. His condition is unknown.

It was the tenth fatality that Lochaber MRT has dealt with in what is now a record breaking year of call outs for the team with more than 120 logged.

A Police Scotland spokesperson said: "Around 3.25pm on Friday, December 30, 2022, we received a report of two people falling in an avalanche at Ben Nevis. The Lochaber Mountain Rescue Team were dispatched and a 49-year-old man was pronounced dead at the scene. A 42-year-old man was taken to Belford Hospital with non-life threatening injuries."

Scotland's daily avalanche hazard forecasts have now fully resumed with 16 already logged so far this winter. The Scottish Avalanche Information Service provides assessments for six mountain areas to about mid April.

Forecasts are given for Lochaber, Glen Coe, Northern and Southern Cairngorms Creag Meagaidh and Torridon. SAIS recorded 162 avalanches for the 2021-22 winter season.

The highest number ever - 350 avalanches - was recorded in the 2014-15 season. The forecasts are used by walkers, climbers and snowsports enthusiasts in planning trips into the hills for all the six monitored areas.

There were no avalanche-related deaths the last two seasons. There was one avalanche fatality during SAIS's 2019-20 season when rescuers recovered the body of missing climber Andrew Vine.

Mr Vine, 41, from the Manchester area, and a female climbing companion were on 4006 feet high Aonach Mor when they were hit a big snow slide. His climbing partner, who managed to walk to the ski area on the mountain despite her injuries, was carried 'several hundred metres' by the avalanche. The pair were not roped together, having just finished a climb.

Mr Vine a mechanical engineer, is understood to have been an experienced climber - having conquered peaks in the Alps and Himalayas - and a member of Manchester-based Karabiner Mountaineering Club.

Mountaineering Scotland's Senior Mountain Safety Advisor, Ross Cadie, explained: "When winter arrives in Scotland's mountains, we need to make sure we do our homework before heading out. Planning and preparation from trusted sources and matching your adventure to your level of skill and conditions will help you return home safely."

Inspector Matt Smith, Police Scotland's mountain rescue team lead added: "As ever, our amazing volunteer mountain rescue teams will be there to support those in difficulty right through the season whatever the weather."

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