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Snowmobiler Killed in Utah Avalanche: 'Just Monster Slabs of Snow'

Snowmobiler Killed in Utah Avalanche: 'Just Monster Slabs of Snow'

Yahoo06-02-2025

A 37-year-old man is dead after being buried in snow during an avalanche while riding a snowmobile in Utah.
On Tuesday, Feb. 4, the Rich County Sheriff's Office identified the victim as Scott Wright from Evanston, Wyo.
The avalanche occurred on Monday, Feb. 3, in the Monte Cristo Snowmobile Area near the Rich County and Cache County Line, the sheriff's office said in a press release.
Wright was snowmobiling with a friend of his at the time of the fatal accident. Afterward, 'the friend was unable to locate the victim and called for help,' the sheriff's office said.
Rich County Search and Rescue were dispatched to the scene at approximately 3 p.m. local time, and multiple other agencies assisted with the search.
Related: Utah Snowmobiler Buried in Avalanche Recalls Being Saved by Brother While on His 'Last Breath': 'Christmas Miracle'
'The snow was very deep where the avalanche occurred and it took nearly four hours to locate the victim,' who was found around 6:30 p.m., the sheriff's office continued.
In a preliminary report, the Utah Avalanche Center said Wright 'was caught, carried, and fully buried in a large hard slab avalanche.'
Dave Sparks told Fox 13 Salt Lake City that his team at Sparks Heavy Rescue faced difficulty locating the victim as they assisted with the search.
'This was a difficult one because the slide was really, really big. It was one of the bigger ones I've seen. There was slabs of snow that were five feet thick by 12 feet long — just monster slabs of snow,' Sparks told the news outlet.
Related: 2 Skiers Killed in Utah Avalanche, 1 Rescued After Digging Himself Out: 'Tragic Accident'
'The fact that the whole thing broke and slid down into the trees made it an extremely complicated recovery," he said.
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Sparks, who allowed his helicopter to be used following the avalanche, explained, "So logistics on this one were very challenging, that's why the Black Hawk is such a powerful tool for this type of stuff."
'That could be a pillow-shaped slope, and then if you're getting any cracking or collapsing, that's a telltale sign that the slope is unstable,' Nikki Champion, a forecaster with the Utah Avalanche Center, told the news station.
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False alarms, beneficial rain and a dusty start to Florida storm season
False alarms, beneficial rain and a dusty start to Florida storm season

Yahoo

time05-06-2025

  • Yahoo

False alarms, beneficial rain and a dusty start to Florida storm season

Happy hurricane season! Clearly, many of you left several gallons of distilled water and a 96-pack of Kirkland Signature AAA batteries out in a windowless interior room on Hurricane Season Eve to appease the Cyclone Imp, because the 2025 hurricane season is off to an auspicious start. Call it Christmas in June: Internet rumors to the contrary, not a tropical depression will be stirring in the Gulf and Caribbean for another week or more. ➤ Track all active storms ➤ Weather alerts via text: Sign up to get updates about current storms and weather events by location The minimal activity in the Tropics today is actually beneficial. On the fifth day of hurricane season, the typical gift is disorganized moisture from the south (or for those observing the traditional bird-based gift calendar, five awkward teenage geese), and that's just what we are seeing out there now. An upper-level low over the eastern Gulf has been interacting with an old, stalled-out frontal boundary this week, enhancing rainfall over the Florida peninsula. As of Wednesday afternoon, rainfall totals have been two to four inches in South Florida and half an inch to an inch in Central Florida. With much of the southern half of the state in moderate to extreme drought, this precipitation is a helpful kick-start to the wet season. For the next day or two, Florida will continue to be wreathed in above-normal thunderstorm coverage as the old front drifts north. Rain chances diminish on Thursday in South Florida and Friday in North Florida as a weak area of low pressure develops in the Carolinas. If the low were to form over water, it would have a fighting chance of tropical or subtropical development, but given the trend towards more inland formation, don't expect a named or numbered system out of this one. The coastal Carolinas will dry out by late Friday as the low scoots northeast and out-to-sea. Otherwise, the rest of the Tropical Atlantic is devoid of thunderstorm activity, nestled beneath a thick, festive layer of African dust. In the first half of June, the Ghosts of Hurricane Seasons Past tell us that the most common locations for tropical storm development are the northwestern Caribbean and eastern Gulf, with something forming between June 1-15 once every three years or so. This year, upper-level winds are likely to remain more favorable for tropical development on the Eastern Pacific side of Central America rather in the Gulf or Caribbean, for at least the next 10 days. Thus, none of the reputable forecast models are showing a realistic chance of anything tropical forming on the Atlantic side of Central America through mid-month. Except the GFS. The American model is adamant that a Caribbean tropical storm will spin up in 10 to 12 days, then move generally northward. 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Dr. Ryan Truchelut is chief meteorologist at WeatherTiger, a Tallahassee company providing forensic meteorology expert witness services and agricultural and hurricane forecasting subscriptions. For more information, visit or get in touch at ryan@ This article originally appeared on Tallahassee Democrat: Florida hurricane season forecast: Rain, Saharan dust, false alarms

Search continues for N.Y. woman who went hiking after father's body on Mount Katahdin in Maine
Search continues for N.Y. woman who went hiking after father's body on Mount Katahdin in Maine

Boston Globe

time04-06-2025

  • Boston Globe

Search continues for N.Y. woman who went hiking after father's body on Mount Katahdin in Maine

'No one has had a brother like mine,' Tim's brother Joe Keiderling 'He left us far too soon,' he said. 'My heart is broken for his wife and children.' Advertisement Park rangers began searching for the father and daughter Monday morning after discovering that their vehicle was still parked in the day-use parking lot, officials said. The body of Tim Keiderling was located on the Tableland, near the summit of Katahdin, at WMTW-TV reported that Esther Keiderling wrote about the hike with her father on Substack on Saturday. 'I'm a little nervous after everything I've read about the Abol trail but I'm going to do it if weather permits! If you don't see me back on Substack notes again, that's where I am,' she wrote. Advertisement Baxter State Park Director Kevin Adam said the weather at Mount Katahdin on Sunday was cloudy with rain, sleet, and west winds reaching 30 to 40 miles per hour. Similar conditions were reported on Monday, he said. 'I have even seen some pictures with snow,' Adam said in an email to the Globe. 'Temperatures would have been in mid 30's, wind chill about 19. Monday temperatures were up into the 40's.' Baxter State Park Rangers expanded their search Tuesday morning with the assistance of more than 30 game wardens, including the Maine Warden Service Search and Rescue team and its K-9 team. The Maine Forest Service was also searching the area with three helicopters, along with a Blackhawk and a Lakota Helicopter outfitted with an infrared thermal imaging device from the Maine Army National Guard, officials said. Baxter State Park officials closed the Hunt and Abol Trails on Katahdin and asked anyone who has any information that could help their search efforts to contact Maine State Police in Houlton at 207-532-5400. Emily Sweeney can be reached at

Searchers find father's body near summit of Katahdin
Searchers find father's body near summit of Katahdin

Yahoo

time03-06-2025

  • Yahoo

Searchers find father's body near summit of Katahdin

Jun. 3—A Maine Warden Service K-9 team found the body of a 58-year-old New York man near the summit of Katahdin on Tuesday, two days after he and his daughter went missing while hiking the 5,267-foot peak in Baxter State Park. Tim Keiderling's body was found in the Katahdin Tablelands at approximately 2:45 p.m. on Tuesday. The search for his daughter, Esther Keiderling, 28, continues. Park officials say the Keiderlings, both of Ulster Park, New York, left Abol Campground on Sunday morning to hike up Katahdin. They were last seen around 10:15 a.m. that day as they headed toward the summit. Rangers began searching for the pair Monday morning after finding their vehicle in a day-use parking lot. They searched the Abol Trail, the Hunt Trail and the Katahdin Tablelands, a level area near the summit, officials said. Searchers found no signs of the pair and on Tuesday expanded the search to include helicopters, more than 30 game wardens and K-9 teams. The Hunt and Abol trails on Katahdin are closed while the search is ongoing. The Maine Forest Service is assisting in the search with three helicopters. The Maine Army National Guard responded with a Blackhawk and a Lakota helicopter equipped with an infrared thermal imaging device. The Abol Trail, a popular but challenging hike with a 3,982-foot elevation gain, is the shortest route to Baxter Peak from a roadside trailhead. The trail used to include the prominent Abol Slide but was relocated in 2015 after soil and rock movement increased hazards for hikers. The relocated trail uses the ridge west of the slide. The rocky terrain requires hikers to climb over large boulders. Forecasts for Sunday by the National Weather Service in Caribou called for scattered showers at Katahdin's summit with winds peaking at 30-40 mph and low temperatures in the mid-30s. The low temperature was expected to hit the mid-30s again on Monday night, when scattered showers were also predicted. A representative at the Caribou Office on Tuesday said the agency only provides forecasts for the summit and doesn't track temperatures and wind speeds. Nearby Millinocket, which is roughly 350 above sea level, saw a low of 36 degrees Monday night. Temperatures were likely much colder on Katahdin's summit, nearly 5,000 feet higher. In a blog post shared to Substack on Saturday, Esther Keiderling wrote that she and her father planned a sales trip around a weekend so they could hike Katahdin. In other posts, she talked about working with her father at Rifton Equipment, where she is a customer service representative, and documented a recent trip they took to Niagara Falls. In her most recent post, Esther Keiderling said she and her father planned to start hiking up the Abol Trail between 6-7 a.m. Sunday if it wasn't pouring rain. "I'm a little nervous about everything I've seen about the Abol trail but I'm going to do it if weather permits!" she wrote. "If you don't see me back on Substack notes again, that's where I am." The search for Esther Keiderling will continue through daylight hours. Volunteer searchers are not needed, park officials said. Anyone who was on or around the Katahdin summit on Sunday between 10:30 a.m. and 2:30 p.m. or has any information about the Keiderlings is asked to call state police in Houlton at 207-532-5400. This story will be updated. Staff Writer Drew Johnson contributed to this report. Copy the Story Link We believe it's important to offer commenting on certain stories as a benefit to our readers. At its best, our comments sections can be a productive platform for readers to engage with our journalism, offer thoughts on coverage and issues, and drive conversation in a respectful, solutions-based way. It's a form of open discourse that can be useful to our community, public officials, journalists and others. We do not enable comments on everything — exceptions include most crime stories, and coverage involving personal tragedy or sensitive issues that invite personal attacks instead of thoughtful discussion. You can read more here about our commenting policy and terms of use. More information is also found on our FAQs. Show less

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