Mountain Assurance Blog
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Mountain Assurance Ltd is owned and run by James Thacker. Our mountain guiding and instructional services are based on broad skills and worldwide experience. Most importantly we use our skills and experience to help our clients achieve their aspirations and full potential. We specialize in tailored instruction and guiding which are matched to individual requirements.
Mountain Assurance Blog
2M ago
Threat Managers: Rethinking risk. This blog is about the management of risk in the outdoor sector, the challenges with risk and a way forward. Here I argue that we need to rethink our notions of risk, explaining the approach of Threat and Error Management (TEM). Mountain Professionals are well placed to act as “Threat Managers”. […]
The post Threat Managers: Rethinking risk first appeared on Mountain Assurance Ltd ..read more
Mountain Assurance Blog
3M ago
Slow is smooth, smooth equals fast is the title of this blog. In climbing and mountaineering there is prestige in speed. Perhaps even an association with speed and competence… This is a blog about the culture of speed in the training, assessment and practice of mountain professionals. It is always there, sometimes pervasive and certainly […]
The post Slow is smooth, smooth EQUALS FAST first appeared on Mountain Assurance Ltd ..read more
Mountain Assurance Blog
6M ago
Exotic behaviour: cultural norms and the wild west. This blog is about exotic behaviour in an archipelago of craggy islands off the west coast of Scotland.
Cultural norms and values give us predictability in the outdoor sector. In short, they provide us with expectations, shaping how we think and act as mountain professionals.
exotic adjective 1. Unusual and interesting, usually because it comes from or is related to a distant country…
When Charles Darwin set off in 1831 on HMS Beagle, he had little ambition for the groundbreaking scientific research which would secure his fame. After survey ..read more
Mountain Assurance Blog
1y ago
Accident Route Matrix
Does the Accident Route Matrix (ARM) have a place in understanding avalanche incidents? In this blog we look at systems based incident analysis. These methods look at all the causal factors in incidents far beyond the “who triggered it” strategy of individual decision making.
There are lots of tools for assessing the Human Factors (HF) that contribute to incidents. The Accident Route Matrix (ARM) provides a graphical representation of the route to the incident. This is really useful to highlight Human Factors issues in avalanche incidents, especially for those who just wa ..read more
Mountain Assurance Blog
1y ago
Today marks the tenth anniversary of the loss of Super Puma G-WNSB on the approach to Sumburgh (Shetland) with four fatalities. Although the Mountain Assurance blog is really about the mountains, this tragic incident is important for a couple of reasons.
The human factors elements of the incident such as task management in challenging weather conditions, can sometimes be found in incidents in the mountains.
The Air Accident Investigation Branch (AAIB) took two different approaches to modelling the human factors elements of the incident. Both of which reached similar conclusions.
The crew of ..read more
Mountain Assurance Blog
1y ago
Human Factors – Change the person or the context? Procedures that we don’t always follow, even if we should. After incidents and near misses in the outdoors much of the conversation around learning from these events is focused on the performance of the instructor or guide concerned.
I recognise that as normal, in that the instructor or guide is often closest to the incident and may even consider themselves directly responsible as an autonomous practitioner.
Having delivered a few human factors and decision making workshops for the Association of Mountaineering Instructors (AMI), many of those ..read more
Mountain Assurance Blog
1y ago
Alison shouted AVALANCHE, as the wet slide exited the hidden couloir well above us. The volume seemed to build exponentially until the snow hit the frozen lake below. Breaking the ice, the debris started a tidal wave across the lakes surface.
Seconds earlier we had faced a “go or no go” decision. We were fully committed, around three quarters into a 40 kilometre ski tour. To add to the pressure we had a flight to catch out of Tromsø the following day.
The day had started innocently enough with the aim to explore the Jiehkkevárri massif on Lyngen. Our plan to circumnavigate the highest summit ..read more
Mountain Assurance Blog
1y ago
1:x What’s in a mountain guiding ratio? 1:1, 1:2 Cultural norms, local customs, regulation and why small ratio groups are more important than you think.
The situation I found myself in was suboptimal. ‘Tower Ridge’ is normally climbed roped up, with one or two clients per instructor or guide, using the techniques of short-roping and short-pitching.
On this occasion it was rapidly getting dark, and the weather was deteriorating. The sideways gusts providing a relentless blast of icy pellets into the side of my face.
‘Tower Ridge’ on Ben Nevis had provided a suitable challenge. The client neares ..read more
Mountain Assurance Blog
1y ago
With the first snow on the Cairngorms now is a good time to talk about the launch of Mountain CRM. This online course is an introduction to ‘Crew Resource Management’ and ‘Human Factors’ in Avalanche Terrain.
You can find this course over on the Mountain Assurance Teachable site at https://mountain-assurance.teachable.com/p/mountain-crm.
You will learn how to understand human vulnerabilities. Develop strategies to help make the right decisions and improve safety when working in avalanche terrain.
Mountain CRM
The content has been written by myself, James Thacker.
We all can make mistakes. Moun ..read more
Mountain Assurance Blog
1y ago
MOVE, MOVE, MOVE, we pushed forwards in towards the cliff as we were hit by the air blast. Pelted by chunks of snow I wrapped my arms around my head and waited either for the avalanche, or my life, to end…
Moments before I was gearing up at the bottom of the classic ice climb ‘Vermicelli’. I was looking up at pretty much fifty metres of vertical ice. Named after a thin strip of pasta, I could see the resemblance, the narrow smear of ice was aesthetic as well as compelling.
It Sounded Like an Avalanche…
There was a loud crack of trees snapping on the hillside above. Andy and I looked briefly ..read more