Posted on 10/27/2005 10:08:45 AM PDT by NormsRevenge
REDMOND, Wash. - A professional skiing photographer attempting to document the harsh Argentine terrain where plane crash survivors once resorted to cannibalism died in a 4,500-foot fall, his family said.
Carl Warren Skoog, 46, fell from the remote southern face of 22,210-foot Mount Mercedario in the Andes on Oct. 17 while working with a longtime ski partner, Rene Crawshaw.
"It wasn't extremely dangerous. He just fell somehow, and he just couldn't get his ice pick in to stop him," said Crawshaw, who needed more than a day to trek out of the remote area to get aid.
The pair had set out to photograph the landscape that became well known after a plane carrying an Uruguayan rugby team crashed in 1972, stranding 16 survivors and forcing them to turn to cannibalism until their rescue 10 weeks later. Their ordeal was the subject of a book and the 1993 movie "Alive."
Skoog's backcountry ski work has been published in magazines including Skiing, Powder and Backcountry. On Wednesday, Backcountry's Web site posted the nine cover shots Skoog took for the magazine, along with a tribute.
Skoog grew up in Bellevue and studied mechanical engineering at the University of Washington before stumbling into professional photography in 1985, when he, his brother Lowell and a friend wrote an article about a ski trip for a mountaineering magazine.
In the mid-1990s, Carl Skoog gave up a job designing outdoor gear to devote himself to photography.
"For about a decade, he was really the most active and the most published of the photographers working in this small and kind of difficult niche," Lowell Skoog said.
Skoog, of Redmond, pioneered numerous descents in Washington's Picket, Bailey and Chiwaukum ranges. In July 1997, he and three friends became the first to ski the treacherous slopes of Mowich Face on the northwest flank of Mount Rainier.
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On the Net:
http://www.backcountrymagazine.com/skoog.html
How very sad.
Sounds like he "stumbled" one too many times ...
It's of little consolation, or none in fact, but he died doing what he loved to do.
For every adventure film, guys like this are taking as big a risk as those behind the lens.
Condolences to all his friends and family.
behind=in front of the
OMG.....how tragic....can't imagine what his last thoughts were.....R.I.P.....
4,500 feet. That's gonna leave a mark.
He fell 4500 feet downa mountain? Jeez, what a way to go. Some may soar with eagles but weasels don't get sucked into jet engine intakes.
Well, if he loved falling off 4500 foot cliffs.
LOL!
You still haven't sent me that photo of you on the gunbarrel!
I've seen many beautiful photographs of skiers, and always wondered about the persons who were able to capture such beauty.
Apparenty, it can be a very dangerous occupation.
This is a serious and sad thing, to be sure. And yet I still have to wonder...
...did he get the shot?
ping
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