Three climbers killed in avalanche on Glencoe’s Buachaille Etive Mor

Three climbers have been killed in an avalanche on Buachaille Etive Mor, the mountain guarding the entrance to Glencoe. Two are brothers in theeir sixties and from Northern Ireland -  Eamonn and John Murphy and one is a Scot from Monifeith, Brian Murray.

Helicopters were called to the mountain at 12.00 on Saturday (24th January) when a total of nine people, in different parties, were caught up in the avalanche. One was an RAF aircraft from Lossiemouth and the other from the Royal Navy’s HNS Gannet.

Buchaille Etive MorThe RAF SAR helicopter from Lossiemouth took two people off the mountain and flew them to Belford Hospital in Fort William. One man was pronounced dead on arrival and the second died later. The third body was found later in the snow.

This afternoon (Sunday 25th police confirmed that there were three dead, including the two brothers.

Tom Richardson, a walker who  survived the avalanche and called the rescue teams said: ‘As I got to the top of the pass, the edge of the slope – it wasn’t corniced – broke away and we were taken down in an avalanche, some of us rode out the top of it and others got buried’.

Five others were rescued from the mountain and one person is being treated for a shoulder injury.

John Grieve, Glencoe Mountain Rescue leader, paid tribute to the team the dead men were with. He said: ‘The first two had been dug out by the party themselves. They did very well. They located one of the buried friends and started resuscitation. Then using their ice axes as probes they quickly located the second member of the party and dug him out as well’.

Northern Constabulary is advising climbers that the risk of avalanches will remain high for the next couple of days. Sport Scotland’s website is putting the risk at category four, on a scale of one to five.

The photograph, by Colin Souze and licensed under Creative Commons, shows a view from the summit of the Devil’s Staircase looking south over the east end of Glen Coe,  towards Buachaille Etive Mòr with Creise and Meall a’ Bhuiridh beyond.

Surfer rescued a mile off Kintyre’s Machrihanish beach in Force 11 winds

A man in his early twenties, surfing off Machrihanish beach on the Mull of Kintyre with a friend was reported missing at 15.40 after they got separated. An hour and twenty minutes later at 17.00 he was found a mile off the beach by a rescue helicopter from Prestwick which picked him up. The winds had whipped up to Force 11 – one point below hurricane level.

The surfer was taken to hospital as a precaution but was uninjured.

The helicopter has had to stay at Machrihanish airport because of the curent wind strengths – a fact underlining the risks the crew took to rescue the surfer in these conditions.

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Manchester kayakers swept into the Corryvrechan

Two kayakers from Greater Manchester who paddled out of Loch Melfort on Saturday afternoon got caught in strong tidal streams that took them into the terrifying Corryvrechan whirlpool between Argyll’s islands of Jura and Scarba. One kayak overturned in the turbulence and when the other man then made an emergency call the situation was aggravated by his giving the wrong position. Although the two middle aged men were well prepared, they had not realised exactly where the tides had taken them. Instead of realising that they were in the Gulf of Corryvrechan, the third strongest whirlpool on the world, they thought they were in The Grey Dogs – another dangerous race a little further north between Scarba and Lunga. However all was well. The men got themselves ashore on Scarba and were found by MV Porpoise, a naval SAR helicopter from HMS Gannet in Prestwick and the Oban Lifeboat – which had been scrambled in the middle of an open day. LIfeboat Coxswain Ronnie MacKillop congratulated them on doing all the right things once they got into difficulties.

If you want to get some idea of what these guys got into, here’s a You Tube video of a RIB that took a deliberate trip into the Corryvrechan.