
Avalanche Education & Risk Management Course
AIARE 2 - Denver
The Colorado Mountain Club has been an AIARE Course Provider since 2011, offering AIARE 1, 2 and Avalanche Rescue to its members. Outdoor recreational educational opportunities are one of the many benefits of being a CMC member. (cmc.org)
- Fri, Apr 5, 2024 - Sun, Apr 7, 2024
- Committee: Denver
- Members: $600.00
- Availability: 6 (6 capacity)
- Cancellation & Refund Policy
Prerequisites: AIARE 1, AIARE Companion Rescue and winter backcountry experience.
Skis only: AT, Tele, Splitboard
AIARE 2 Course Description
The AIARE 2 builds on your experience as a backcountry traveler. You will learn tools to apply The AIARE Framework, the repeatable process you learned in an AIARE 1, to new situations and to self-direct your learning after the course. You will learn more skills to connect weather, snowpack and avalanche processes, and identify how these processes relate to observations and travel within avalanche terrain. This can enable you to act as a leader within a small travel group and to identify and target reducing uncertainty about the terrain or conditions.
Why Take Your AIARE 2 with Us?
As a member of the Colorado Mountain Club, one of your benefits is access to educational programs to improve your skills and experiences in outdoor recreational adventures. Learn along side other CMC members and support the club at the same time.
Who Should Take this Course
The AIARE 2 provides backcountry leaders the opportunity to advance their avalanche knowledge and decision-making skills. The prerequisites for this course are an AIARE 1, an Avalanche Rescue course, and a winter of practical experience after taking the AIARE 1.
What You’ll Learn
During an AIARE 2 course, you’ll spend time learning these skills, both in a classroom setting and in the field:
- Differentiating where specific avalanche hazards exist within the landscape
- Identifying avalanche terrain where consequences may be more severe
- Using and interpreting weather, snow, and avalanche observations to make more specific terrain decisions
- Leadership skills to use in a small team, including facilitating small group discussion, promoting appropriate terrain selection, and utilizing simple risk management strategies
Questions? Contact uwesartori@mac.com or text 720 257 8322
Badges you will earn:
This course has no scheduled activities.
Mode of Travel: AT Skis, Tele skis, split-boards only.
Helmets Mandatory
Please Have:
- 10 essentials appropriate for the Colorado early spring environment
- Full touring set-up in good working order (skis or split board, plus skins, boots, etc)
- 32-40L Backpack
- Transceiver, probe - 280 cm recommended, packable metal shovel
- Layering system for longer days than AIARE 1
- Food, snacks, tea, water for longer days than AIARE 1
- Working map application on phone and battery charge pack for phone as needed
- Airbag - Optional
- Optional, but ideal: Snow saw and large column cutting cord (Rutschblock cord); snow study kit.
If you have questions, please contact the course leader.
You must register for this course to see course materials.