Skiers describe trying to help avalanche victim near Brighton


1 photo
Save Story
KEY TAKEAWAYS
  • Siblings Maggie and Harrison Garner, and their friend Darius Christensen, joined others to search for the buried victim of an avalanche near Brighton Thursday.
  • Despite efforts, the girl died at the hospital, marking Utah's second avalanche fatality in two days.

SOUTH JORDAN – Several friends said they tried to help the victim of a deadly avalanche Thursday near Brighton Ski Resort.

Siblings Maggie and Harrison Garner were with their friend Darius Christensen skiing in the backcountry. They said they were in the same area where an avalanche killed a young girl.

Unified police said the girl, whose name and age were not immediately released, was with her family when the slide happened.

"It was kind of just like a surreal thing," said Maggie Garner, who studies at Utah Valley University. "You were like, 'What's even really happening right now?'"

"It was just scary and crazy," added her brother Harrison Garner, a junior at Bingham High School.

Maggie and Harrison Garner speak with KSL, Thursday.
Maggie and Harrison Garner speak with KSL, Thursday. (Photo: Wesley Barton, KSL)

The group said as they were skiing in the area, which police said was out of bounds of Brighton Ski Resort, they noticed the snow looked different.

"And I was like, 'Oh, it was an avalanche,'" said Christensen, a 9th grader at South Jordan Middle School.

They learned a girl was buried. They said they quickly joined others to start probing the snow and search for her.

"In a moment of dire need, everybody came together and was like, 'We need to get to work and save this girl,'" Christensen said.

Darius Christensen speaks with KSL, Thursday.
Darius Christensen speaks with KSL, Thursday. (Photo: Wesley Barton, KSL)

They worked to help dig her out, but she didn't survive. Unified police said the girl died at the hospital. It was the second deadly avalanche in Utah in two days.

"I was just super sad, just thinking what … if it was like my family member, what I would be doing," Harrison Garner said, "and just thinking it was super sad for that family."

"It was just super scary to think how everything could go wrong that quick," Christensen added.

His mother, Heidi Christensen, told KSL she's warned her son to stay out of the backcountry. But she's grateful he and his friends tried to help in someone's time of need.

An aerial view of Brighton Ski Resort on Thursday.
An aerial view of Brighton Ski Resort on Thursday. (Photo: Mark Less, KSL/Chopper 5)

"My heart sank for that poor family because I can't imagine going through something like that," she said, adding that she hopes they find peace. "You just hope that they're surrounded by a lot of love and compassion because none of us ever know what is coming our way, and freak accidents happen."

Photos

The Key Takeaways for this article were generated with the assistance of large language models and reviewed by our editorial team. The article, itself, is solely human-written.

Related stories

Most recent Outdoors stories

Related topics

Daniel Woodruff, KSLDaniel Woodruff
Daniel Woodruff is a reporter/anchor with deep experience covering Utah news. He is a native of Provo and a graduate of Brigham Young University. Daniel has also worked as a journalist in Indiana and Wisconsin.
KSL.com Beyond Business
KSL.com Beyond Series

KSL Weather Forecast

KSL Weather Forecast
Play button