Avalanche mitigation is now safer at Alta Ski Resort thanks to new tech

The crown of an avalanche triggered on Little Water Peak near Millcreek Canyon is pictured on Jan. 3, 2022. Alta Ski Resort is using new technology to help navigate avalanche mitigation.

The crown of an avalanche triggered on Little Water Peak near Millcreek Canyon is pictured on Jan. 3, 2022. Alta Ski Resort is using new technology to help navigate avalanche mitigation. (Utah Avalanche Center)


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ALTA — Alta Ski Resort is using new technology to help navigate avalanche mitigation.

A new video by Ski Utah features the BW-Exploder, or boom whoosh among other new tech.

The boom whoosh is a remote avalanche control system developed in Jackson Hole for North America. Boom whoosh's essential difference from its European competitors is how it receives its fuel. A mix of gas goes to the funnel from as far as a kilometer away.

Alta Communications manager Lexi Dowdall explains what happens. "That mixing of ingredients is what causes the force that comes rushing out that nozzle at an extremely high speed," she said. "The force of that will then, hopefully, trigger any weak layers that might be lurking in the snowpack that could cause an avalanche."

This is one of several new technologies being used as the military recalls the previously used howitzer. The boom of Little Cottonwood Canyon's howitzers will be missed, Dowdall said, but there are now safer ways for avalanche mitigation to happen.

Dowdall said the beauty of remote systems is they eliminate the need for snow safety professionals and ski patrollers to go out and hike during avalanches.

Alta is currently the only resort in Utah to use the boom whoosh. Visit skiutah.com to learn more.

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