At Mike Wiegele Helicopter Skiing we provide you with the ultimate skiing / boarding experience in the safest environment possible. Our guides are highly trained, our safety systems are the best in the business and our equipment is the most technically advanced - anywhere.
Safety is our number one priority.
Our guides are chosen for their ability to provide you with an exciting and memorable ski vacation while always caring for your safety and comfort. Many senior guides have been with MWHS for more than 20 years.
MWHS guides are fully trained. They all have achieved qualifications with the Canadian Avalanche Association (CAA), Canadian Ski Guide Association (CSGA) or international equivalent, and the Canadian Ski Instructors Alliance (CSIA). Many of our guides have achieved the highest levels of qualifications available. Now, many of our senior guides are involved in teaching courses in the CSGA or CSIA, gained through a minimum of 10 years guiding. In addition, our guides participate in a comprehensive MWHS 10 day training session prior to the season opening in the implementation of our operational and rescue systems.
Our guides are also your Resort hosts - they meet you on arrival, take you to your accommodations and show you our facilities. Every evening after their detailed guides meeting, they will meet you in the Powder Max Dining Room and the Silver Buckle Lounge for your gourmet dining experience and conversation. Every ski week is an instructional week. Whether you are a first timer or an expert powder skier, your guide is also a qualified ski instructor and will help you improve your technique to increase your powder enjoyment.
>>back to top
Traveling safely in the mountains requires that our guides balance excitement and challenge with your safety and comfort. Guides meet each morning and evening in the Guides Haus - the heart of the operation. With the state of the art equipment, guides review field observations, snow pit data and remote weather station data feeds. They then choose the day's ski terrain based on snow stability analysis and predicted weather.
Each guest is issued an Ortovox transceiver as well as a light shovel pack, equipped with a shovel and probe. Guests are required to wear the transceiver while in the mountains and are instructed in its use before beginning skiing or boarding. All guides carry rescue equipment and first aid supplies in their packs.
Your guide will continually assess the snow stability. Occasionally they will stop and dig a snow pit. They make snow profiles to find a gliding layer, perform a shear test and assess for a potential avalanche. Ski terrain follows selection and guiding procedure is adjusted accordingly. When the snow stability is good we have more options. If the rating is fair or poor we ski more moderate slopes, those less exposed to potential avalanches. We select semi-level, low angle terrain in steepness with no or less probability of avalanche in size. This way we greatly reduce the risk.
The Grizzly Hut, donated by long time friend and guest, Matthias Maresch, was built in 1993 to support avalanche research and development. Located in the Monashee Mountains, it is used as well as an emergency shelter and as a rescue storage cache and safe, warm haven in the mountains.
Extensive safety and rescue systems and detailed plans address foreseeable emergency scenarios in the back country. Three repeater stations provide uninterrupted radio communication between the Blue River base station and each helicopter. The Blue River base station constantly monitors the location of each helicopter and maintains at minimum an hourly contact. Rescue caches located in key locations throughout the mountains provide a toboggan, avalanche crevasse rescue equipment and back country survival equipment. Each helicopter carries first aid equipment, oxygen, avalanche rescue ropes and an avalanche pack.
The purpose of this organization is to build and maintain a facility for continuous research and training for the future. Donations can be made directly to the Norbert Wiegele Snow Sciences Program, please make cheques payable to Mike Wiegele Helicopter Skiing.
Guests are responsible for following the guide's instructions at all times and for skiing / boarding within the set parameters. Detailed safety Instructions, safety in and around the helicopters as well as the risks of back country wilderness skiing are outlined in the Hazard Awareness and Prevention booklet that is provided to each guest.
Guests participate in a mandatory Safety Orientation of which involves viewing a DVD mountain safety presentation, helicopter safety orientation with your pilot and personal training in the use of the transceiver prior to the first day of skiing / boarding. Each guest is given an Ortovox transceiver and a shovel pack including a shovel and probe for use during their stay. Use of MWHS transceivers is mandatory while in the mountains.
All guides are trained in first aid and a medical clinic is located in the Guides Haus. It is well equipped to meet the medical needs of our skiing guests. As part of our guiding operation and safety system, we employ a fully qualified medical physician. The doctor typically skis with our guests during the day and is able to attend to any medical concerns in the mountains or after skiing.