Three serious avalanches buried separate groups of skiers, two in Val d'Isere and one near Saint-Colomban-des-Villards, and resulted in the deaths of 2 and serious injury to 2 others.
This morning a group of 3 skiers, reported to be season workers, triggered a slab avalanche near the top of the Bellevard. According to pistehors (who tend to know such things), the slope they were traversing is known to be avalanche prone and ends in a terrain trap. Avalanche risk was Level 4 (that's Level 4 out of 5 - High). Two of the 3 were caught and buried. They were wearing transceivers and the first was recovered quickly, with the 2nd found beneath 1.5 metres of snow after 5 minutes in a state of cardiac arrest. He was resuscitated but remains in serious condition.

Picture from RadioValDisere
In the second Val d'Isere avalanche a group of Spanish skiers triggered an avalanche in the closed Santons run. The piste was closed, due to the avalanche risk, and anyone familiar with it will know it runs through several gullies - natural terrain traps - where the slide occurred. This group did not have transceivers and a search had to await the arrival of pisteurs and avalanche dogs. One skier was buried under one and a half metres and was pronounced dead at the scene after lengthy efforts to resuscitate.
The third avalanche was "huge", apparently and killed a Czech skier who had both an airbag and a transceiver.
PLEASE - READ THIS
I expect we'll be doing this again this week, but :-
- Know the Avalanche Risk Scale and understand that Level 3 is Considerable (that's considerably dangerous for us punters). Levels 4 and 5 mean avalanches are likely, not just possible.
- Know the local Risk Level where you're going.
- Remember the absolute best way of surviving an avalanche (and the only one that always works); is not to get caught in one in the first place.
- DON'T duck the ropes, take a punt, throw caution to the wind or be Billy Big Balls this week. Pistes that are closed, are closed for a reason.
- DON'T leave the pistes without "the holy trinity" and the knowledge to use it.
There's going to be loads of Pow on the pistes this week and next; have fun, but play safe.