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Roaring Fork Valley avalanche forecaster gets aerial assistance ahead of Wednesday snowpack talk

Dylan Craaybeek looks for avalanches in the Roaring Fork Valley while on an EcoFlight plane on Tuesday, March 25.
Colin Suszynski/The Aspen Times

Avalanche forecasters have to do a lot of walking in order to get the information they need to provide accurate forecasts of avalanche danger. 

In the Roaring Fork Valley and elsewhere, that often means skiing upwards of 10 miles a day between the uphill walking and downhill skiing portion. This adds up over the course of the entire fall, winter, and spring season that they are offering forecasts to the public.

It can be made incomparably easier though, if forecasters can find a way into the air. 



That’s what the forecaster for the Central Mountains region, which Aspen and its associated backcountry terrain falls into, was doing on the bluebird morning of Tuesday, March 25 when he boarded an EcoFlight Cessna Centurion 210 airplane at the Aspen/Pitkin County airport. 

Dylan Craaybeek, the Central Mountains region forecaster for the Colorado Avalanche Information Center, was able to knock out visual observations on an incredibly wide ranging swath of popular backcountry skiing areas in the Elk Range region.



An EcoFlight plane brought an avalanche forecaster up to the sky to get an aerial perspective on the snowpack on Tuesday, March 25. This is the view out of the plane as it passed by Marble.

“It would take years to ski as many zones as we saw today and we still only covered a section of the Elk Range,” Craaybeek said. 

EcoFlight, the company that brought Craaybeek up into the sky to make avalanche observations, is a nonprofit dedicated to conservation via flights for scientists, politicians, and others to show them the environment from a macro perspective. 

“You can really see where the watersheds are, the continuousness and the contiguousness of the landscape, and it sort of gives the land a voice,” said Bruce Gordon, Founder and Chief Pilot of EcoFlight. 

That macro perspective can be valuable to avalanche forecasters or other researchers and scientists in the region. Visual observations of avalanches, or lack thereof, help Craaybeek build his forecast. Seeing the size, snow quality, aspect, and more qualities of the snow help Craaybeek analyze what’s occurring in the snowpack and where.

An EcoFlight plane brought an avalanche forecaster up to the sky to get an aerial perspective on the snowpack on Tuesday, March 25. This is the view out of the plane as it passed by Marble.
Colin Suszynski/The Aspen Times

On a typical day, Craaybeek relies on his own walks and observations and supplements his forecasts with observations and photos sent in by other backcountry travelers throughout the day. 

However, the occasional aerial trip during the spring can give Craaybeek a macro-view of a larger portion of the region which helps him understand how the snow is likely to respond to increased solar radiation, temperatures, and lack of snow as the season settles in.

EcoFlight is hosting Craaybeek for a state of the snowpack talk at Hooch Craft and Cocktail Bar from 5 p.m. to 6:30 p.m. on Wednesday, March 26 where he will discuss some of what he saw from the air. Attendees can expect to get valuable information on the snowpack as it is currently and as it is expected to evolve as well as conversations on conservation and climate from EcoFlight. 

More information can be found at https://aspenchamber.org/events/state-snowpack-ecoflight-and-caic.

The instrument cluster in the Cessna Centurion 210 during a flight to show a local avalanche forecaster the state of the snowpack on Tuesday, March 25.
Colin Suszynski/The Aspen Times
Avalanches were visible from the windows of this EcoFlight plane as it flew nearby popular Roaring Fork Valley backcountry zones on Tuesday, March 25.
Colin Suszynski/The Aspen Times
A large slide was visible from the window of the EcoFlight plane on March 25.
Colin Suszynski/The Aspen Times

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