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Lake Tahoe avalanche is latest tragedy in a deadly winter from hell in California mountains

lake-tahoe-avalanche-is-latest-tragedy-in-a-deadly-winter-from-hell-in-california-mountains
Lake Tahoe avalanche is latest tragedy in a deadly winter from hell in California mountains

An apocalyptic avalanche that buried up to 10 backcountry skiers north of Lake Tahoe on Tuesday is only the latest tragedy during a deadly winter from hell in California’s vast mountain ranges.

A rescue effort to find survivors remained ongoing in the Central Sierra Nevada — the same area where another avalanche killed a snowmobiler in early January.

The Nevada County Sheriff's Office along with our Nevada County Sheriff's Search & Rescue team and allied agencies, are responding to a report of an avalanche in the Castle Peak area that occurred at approximately 11:30 am today.

An avalanche near Lake Tahoe prompted a rescue effort Tuesday. Nevada County Sheriff’s Office

The season’s snowy trail of death hit the slopes of Mount Baldy — a 10,064-foot peak straddling Los Angeles and San Bernardino counties — in late December, as three hikers perished in extreme winter weather, including a 19-year-old Santa Clara University freshman who fell 500 feet, sheriff’s officials said.

Another two hikers were fortunately rescued.

The Dec. 29 search-and-rescue effort reinvigorated longstanding warnings about hiking on Mount Baldy, where 23 people had died between 2016 and 2025.

Individuals are stretchered off after a police helicopter lands on helipad on Monday, Dec. 30, 2025 in San Bernardino, Calif.

Three hikers perished on Mount Baldy, while another two were rescued in late December. AP

San Bernardino County’s sheriff’s officials even compared the peak’s deadliness to Mount Everest, SFGate first reported.

But other Golden State mountains also proved treacherous in the nearly two months since the Mount Baldy tragedy.


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A hiker who staged his own search for four missing friends in Riverside County’s mountain region was found dead at the bottom of a 150-foot rock face in Anza on Jan. 17.

The quartet of hikers he had endeavored to find were eventually located by Riverside County sheriff’s deputies.

General view of the Riverside Mountain Rescue Unit during a training exercise in a photo posted to Facebook on Sept 7, 2024.

Riverside County sheriff’s deputies rescued four hikes in the area’s mountain region. Riverside Mountain Rescue Unit

General views of Mount Whitney, the highest mountain in the contiguous U.S., against the Alabama Hills rock formations, a wide area filming location for hundreds of iconic Hollywood Western films and TV shows on September 22, 2024 in Lone Pine, California.

A hiker also died on Mount Whitney. GC Images

A few days later, another hiker on Mount Whitney — the 14,505-foot Sierra Nevada peak that’s the tallest mountain in the contiguous US — died within a few hundred feet of its summit.

Tragically, the hiker had set off alone after his partner turned back.

The popular ski slopes along 11,000-foot Mammoth Mountain experienced four deaths this season — including Raymond John Albert Jr., a 71-year-old whose penchant for skiing nearly every day earned him the nickname “Every Day Ray.”

He died on Christmas Day.

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A day later, ski patroller Cole Murphy, 30, was swept up and injured in an avalanche on Lincoln Mountain. He died a few days later.

The next fatal incident unfolded Jan. 14, when Sebastian Celaya Salcido, 25, suffered a catastrophic snowboarding accident on Mammoth Mountain. He died two days later after he was airlifted to Reno with irreversible brain damage.

Another thrill-seeking skier — Robert Carroll, 40 — died Feb. 5 as he attempted Dropout 2, a notorious expert run plunging about 1,200 feet.

Raymond John Albert in a ski suit.

Raymond John Albert Jr. was known for skiing every day, earning him the nickname “Every Day Ray.” Facebook/Diane Justice

Sebastian Celaya Salcido holding a glass of wine.

Sebastian Celaya Salcido died after a catastrophic snowboarding accident. GoFundMe

Cole Murphy posing for a photo in the mountains.

Ski patroller Cole Murphy was swept up in an avalanche. Mammoth Mountain Ski Patrol

Robert Carroll in the mountains.

Robert Carroll died in a horrific skiing accident on Mammoth Mountain. Robert Carroll

As one witness posted in a chilling Reddit thread, Carroll slid headlong down the slope and into rocks after losing his skis.

His body continued the headfirst slide for another 150 yards, leaving a trail of blood in the snow, the witness wrote.

“Worst thing I’ve ever seen on the mountain,” the post states.

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