Skip to content
NOWCAST WXII 12 News at 8 a.m. Saturday
Watch on Demand
Advertisement

'It just buried me so quick': Palisades Tahoe avalanche survivor describes the moment he was rescued

Jason Parker said he thought to himself, “Is this really happening?”

'It just buried me so quick': Palisades Tahoe avalanche survivor describes the moment he was rescued

Jason Parker said he thought to himself, “Is this really happening?”

FROM LIVECOPTER3. THANKS TO OUR PHOTOGRAPHER THERE. AND RIGHT NOW WE CONTINUE OUR TEAM COVERAGE WHERE WE ARE HEARING FROM A MAN WHO WAS BURIED BY THAT AVALANCHE YESTERDAY. HIS NAME IS JASON PARKER. HIS STORY IS UNBELIEVABLE. HE WALKED US THROUGH THE MOMENTS HE GOT SWEPT UP ALL THE WAY UNTIL HE WAS DUG OUT. INITIALLY IT WAS SLOW. IT WAS LIKE, WHOA, THIS IS IS THIS REALLY HAPPENING? I’M THINKING IN MY HEAD AND I’M JUST KIND OF TRYING TO STAY ABOVE IT. UM, KIND OF SWIMMING DOWN A LITTLE BIT AS MUCH AS I CAN. AND THEN OF COURSE, ONCE I GOT TO THE AREA WHERE THAT STEEP GULLY IS, IT JUST ACCELERATED AND YOU COULD FEEL THERE WAS A LOT MORE, UH, POWER TO IT. AT THIS POINT. AND, UH, ANYWAY, AT THAT POINT I GET WASHED THROUGH THE GULLY AND, AND SOMEHOW AND I DON’T REMEMBER, BUT IT FLIPPED ME ONTO MY BELLY. AND NOW I’M GOING DOWN HEAD FIRST, TRYING TO JUST SWIM, UH, TO THE TOP. AND I WAS KIND OF LOOKING UP AND TRYING TO, YOU KNOW, MAKE SURE MY HEAD’S ABOVE WHEN IT DOES STOP, BECAUSE IT JUST KIND OF CEMENTS YOU IN. AND, UM, AND THEN I JUST GOT HIT FROM THE REST OF THE DEBRIS FIELD, OR YOU KNOW, THAT CAME DOWN AND IT JUST BURIED ME. SO QUICK AND ALL I COULD THINK ABOUT IT. AND I’VE TAKEN AN AVI CLASS WAS MAYBE PUNCH A HOLE WITH MY RIGHT ARM THAT WASN’T SEALED YET. AND MAKE AN AIR POCKET, AND THEN IT JUST LIKE I SAID, GOT REAL QUIET. NOTHING’S HAPPENING. I YELL EVERY ONCE IN A WHILE, HELP! BUT AT HAT POINT, I FELT THIS PROBE HIT THE MIDDLE OF MY BACK OR RIGHT IN MY SPINE, AND IT JUST JARRED ME. AND I WAS LIKE, OH MAN. AND THAT’S WHEN I COULD HEAR THE THE PERSON ABOVE ME JUST GO, I FOUND HIM OR WE GOT HIM. AND, UH, I JUST ARE. I MEAN, AT THAT POINT, YOU KNOW, IT’S PROBABLY GOING TO BE OKAY. YOU MADE IT. WOW. AND THIS IS THE VIDEO OF HIM BEING DUG OUT. WHAT? YOU SEE? RIGHT HERE. HE SAYS HE TIMED THINGS OUT AND ESTIMATES HE WAS BURIED FOR ABOUT 7 TO 8 MINUTES. HE CREDITS HIS SURVIVAL TO YEARS OF EXPERIENCE AND FORMAL AVALANCHE TRAINING. AS YOU HEARD HIM SAY, HE TOOK A CLASS, AN AVI CLASS. GET THIS, HE SAYS. ONCE HE WAS DUG OUT, HE GAVE HUGS TO THOSE WHO SAVED HIM AND HIS FIANCE, THEN CONTINUED SKIING DOWN THE HILL. AND AS YOU HEARD JASON MENTION
Advertisement
'It just buried me so quick': Palisades Tahoe avalanche survivor describes the moment he was rescued

Jason Parker said he thought to himself, “Is this really happening?”

A 52-year-old man caught in the deadly avalanche at Palisades Tahoe said he reached a point where he thought he might not survive.Jason Parker credits a snowboarder named Luke and others on the mountain Wednesday morning with saving his life. He told sister station KCRA in an interview that he estimates he was buried in snow for up to eight minutes and had been starting to lose consciousness before the rescue.“And then the best thing ever happened,” he said. “I felt this sensation, this probe just nail me right in the back, and I heard this person yell, ‘I found him’ or, ‘We got him.’ I kind of woke up rejuvenated.” Parker, who lives in Reno, is a pass holder at the Palisades Tahoe. He said he and his fiancée knew that the KT-22 lift was going to open for the first time of the season on Wednesday and took the first chair up the mountain. He expected conditions to be windy with low visibility. Still, he and other locals on the lift line at 8:30 a.m. also expected a “fun day,” he said. Right off the bat, Parker noticed some “good powder” but could tell the wind had deposited a lot of snow on the left side of the chair. He said after going back up the lift, he decided to check out the steep GS bowl area. As he skied down the mountain, he stopped and noticed some debris coming down. Ten seconds later, he was hit with a first wave of snow that put him on his back. He said he thought to himself, “Is this really happening?” The avalanche accelerated as he got to the area where the steep gully was, he said. He was flipped onto his belly and “going headfirst, trying to swim to the top.” Parker said he noticed two other skiers and yelled at them to “watch me, watch me.” He said that after getting through the gully he began to slow down and thought he would be OK. He estimates he was buried under six inches to a foot of snow at that point. But then he got hit by another debris field, “and it just buried me so quick.” Parker said that made an air pocket by “punching a hole” that wasn’t sealed yet and began to scream for help for what seemed like a couple of minutes. At that point, his breathing was heavy, and he said he told himself to calm down and save oxygen. “Then it got real quiet,” he said. As he began to lose consciousness, Parker felt himself relaxing and thought he might “start dreaming.”“It was so weird,” he said, adding that he began to think, “This is the way you’re going out.” “I’ve lived a great life,” he said he thought to himself. He began to be “kind of at peace with it.” Soon, others who were searching for him made contact and dug out an airway for him. People traded off trying to dig him out, he said. “It was locals,” he said. “People that know the area well and that saved me. I can’t thank them enough.” Parker said he is an experienced skier of 35 years and had avalanche training. Yet he said what happened to him is a reminder that everyone needs to be prepared when out on the slopes. “You can’t let your guard down when you’re in the mountains,” he said. “Looking back — a beacon would have been great. It gives that much more time for rescuers, if they have a transmitter, to find you.”Parker said that after finding his fiancée, who wasn’t caught up in the avalanche, they hugged “for as long as I could.” They then continued skiing down the hill. He hopes to reconnect with the snowboarder Luke at some point.

A 52-year-old man caught in the deadly avalanche at Palisades Tahoe said he reached a point where he thought he might not survive.

Jason Parker credits a snowboarder named Luke and others on the mountain Wednesday morning with saving his life. He told sister station KCRA in an interview that he estimates he was buried in snow for up to eight minutes and had been starting to lose consciousness before the rescue.

Advertisement

“And then the best thing ever happened,” he said. “I felt this sensation, this probe just nail me right in the back, and I heard this person yell, ‘I found him’ or, ‘We got him.’ I kind of woke up rejuvenated.”

Parker, who lives in Reno, is a pass holder at the Palisades Tahoe. He said he and his fiancée knew that the KT-22 lift was going to open for the first time of the season on Wednesday and took the first chair up the mountain.

He expected conditions to be windy with low visibility. Still, he and other locals on the lift line at 8:30 a.m. also expected a “fun day,” he said.

Right off the bat, Parker noticed some “good powder” but could tell the wind had deposited a lot of snow on the left side of the chair.

He said after going back up the lift, he decided to check out the steep GS bowl area. As he skied down the mountain, he stopped and noticed some debris coming down.

Ten seconds later, he was hit with a first wave of snow that put him on his back.

He said he thought to himself, “Is this really happening?”

The avalanche accelerated as he got to the area where the steep gully was, he said. He was flipped onto his belly and “going headfirst, trying to swim to the top.”

Parker said he noticed two other skiers and yelled at them to “watch me, watch me.”

He said that after getting through the gully he began to slow down and thought he would be OK. He estimates he was buried under six inches to a foot of snow at that point.

But then he got hit by another debris field, “and it just buried me so quick.”

Parker said that made an air pocket by “punching a hole” that wasn’t sealed yet and began to scream for help for what seemed like a couple of minutes.

At that point, his breathing was heavy, and he said he told himself to calm down and save oxygen.

“Then it got real quiet,” he said.

As he began to lose consciousness, Parker felt himself relaxing and thought he might “start dreaming.”

“It was so weird,” he said, adding that he began to think, “This is the way you’re going out.”

“I’ve lived a great life,” he said he thought to himself. He began to be “kind of at peace with it.”

Soon, others who were searching for him made contact and dug out an airway for him. People traded off trying to dig him out, he said.

“It was locals,” he said. “People that know the area well and that saved me. I can’t thank them enough.”

Parker said he is an experienced skier of 35 years and had avalanche training. Yet he said what happened to him is a reminder that everyone needs to be prepared when out on the slopes.

“You can’t let your guard down when you’re in the mountains,” he said. “Looking back — a beacon would have been great. It gives that much more time for rescuers, if they have a transmitter, to find you.”

Parker said that after finding his fiancée, who wasn’t caught up in the avalanche, they hugged “for as long as I could.”

They then continued skiing down the hill.

He hopes to reconnect with the snowboarder Luke at some point.