State-specific addendum to PeakScout's Federal Land Liability framework. This page covers avalanche death risk, CAIC forecast limitations, SNOTEL data limitations, terrain hazards, USFS backcountry travel regulations, and the absence of ski patrol, rescue guarantees, and avalanche control in uncontrolled terrain.
Backcountry skiing in avalanche terrain is a potentially fatal activity. Avalanches have no warning system, no brakes, and no mercy. Colorado averages 5–10 avalanche fatalities per year. Every one of them involved someone who made a decision in terrain — often with the same data PeakScout shows you. The data does not save you. Your training, judgment, and partners do. If you do not have formal avalanche education and regularly practiced rescue skills, you should not enter avalanche terrain. PeakScout does not provide avalanche safety training and cannot be used as a substitute for it.
Colorado's Recreational Use Statute limits the liability of landowners — including the U.S. Forest Service, Bureau of Land Management, Colorado State Land Board, and private landowners who permit recreational access — who open their land for recreational use without charge. Under this statute, these entities owe no duty of care to recreational users for conditions on the property, absent willful or malicious failure to guard against a known dangerous condition. PeakScout, as an information provider that aggregates publicly available data about these lands, operates within this statutory protection framework. Accessing Colorado backcountry skiing terrain through PeakScout-sourced information does not create additional liability on PeakScout's part.
The Colorado Ski Safety Act primarily governs ski area operations within the boundaries of licensed ski areas, including responsibilities of ski area operators, skier duties, and liability limits for inherent risks of skiing on groomed runs with ski patrol and avalanche control. The Ski Safety Act does NOT apply to backcountry terrain outside licensed ski area boundaries. Backcountry skiing in Colorado's National Forests, Wilderness Areas, and unmanaged terrain is not covered by the Ski Safety Act. There is no operator, no avalanche control program, no ski patrol, and no grooming in backcountry terrain. Skiers in backcountry terrain are subject to the general Recreational Use Statute — not Ski Safety Act protections.
Colorado's backcountry skiing terrain is predominantly located on U.S. National Forest lands (White River, Arapaho-Roosevelt, San Isabel, Gunnison, Rio Grande, San Juan, and others). USFS regulations govern access to these lands, including Wilderness Area restrictions (no motorized equipment, pack-in/pack-out requirements), permit requirements in high-use corridors (Indian Peaks Wilderness, Maroon Bells-Snowmass Wilderness), and seasonal closure orders. PeakScout does not display current USFS administrative closure orders — verify access status with the relevant Ranger District before your trip. Trespassing on closed terrain can result in civil citation and removal of rescue eligibility at certain management areas.
This disclaimer supplements — and does not replace — PeakScout's Federal Land Liability Disclaimer. Both apply when using PeakScout for Colorado backcountry skiing planning.
The Colorado Avalanche Information Center (CAIC) divides Colorado into approximately 10 forecast zones. Each daily forecast rates danger on a 1–5 scale for a broad geographic region. A "Considerable" (3) rating for the Vail & Summit region covers terrain spanning hundreds of square miles with every aspect, elevation band, and slope angle represented. A specific 38-degree northeast-facing slope in a terrain trap may have dramatically higher hazard than the zone average. The zone forecast is your starting point. It is never your final answer.
CAIC Danger Scale — What Each Level Means for Backcountry Travel
PeakScout displays snowpack data from the Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) SNOTEL network — automated electronic snow monitoring stations at fixed locations. SNOTEL measures snow water equivalent (SWE), snow depth, air temperature, and precipitation at its instrument site. It does not observe layering, grain structure, weak layers, crusts, facets, depth hoar, or any of the physical snowpack characteristics that determine avalanche likelihood on a given slope.
The distinction between a survivable avalanche and a fatal one is often not the size of the slide — it's the terrain below it. Terrain traps (cliff bands, gullies, ravines, trees, rocks) concentrate avalanche debris, multiply burial depth, and eliminate self-rescue. PeakScout does not map, identify, or warn about terrain traps, cliff bands, tree wells, or other terrain features that escalate the consequences of an avalanche.
Terrain Traps
Cliff Bands & Consequential Terrain
Tree Wells & Deep Snow Suffocation
Avalanche rescue gear (beacon, shovel, probe) and airbag packs are widely available and widely carried. They save lives only when partners know how to use them correctly and are not buried themselves. Having the gear does not reduce the probability of an avalanche. Having the gear without practiced rescue skills provides false confidence with partial protection. PeakScout's display of recommended equipment is informational only. Possession of recommended gear does not reduce PeakScout's or any land manager's liability for recreational injuries.
AIARE Level 1 (or equivalent) avalanche education is the minimum standard for independent backcountry travel in avalanche terrain. This is an 18–24 hour course that includes field days with snowpit assessment, companion rescue drills, and terrain reading. No data platform, app, website, or briefing service substitutes for this training. PeakScout displaying CAIC data does not make you safer in avalanche terrain without this foundation.
When you leave the ski area boundary, you leave behind: ski patrol, avalanche control blasting, groomed runs, rescue sleds, and the legal obligation of a ski area operator to maintain reasonable safety. Colorado Search and Rescue teams are volunteer organizations. Response times to backcountry avalanche accidents routinely exceed 2–4 hours for access alone. Burial survival rate drops sharply after 15 minutes. Self-rescue and partner rescue are your primary survival systems.
Colorado mountain passes and backcountry access roads close regularly during winter months — often unexpectedly due to avalanche slide activity on the road itself, storm closures, and maintenance operations. PeakScout does not display real-time CDOT road closure data for access routes to backcountry skiing zones.
The primary killer in Colorado backcountry. CAIC data is zone-level. Your slope may have higher danger than the rated zone. No data platform prevents burial — only terrain avoidance, group discipline, and partner rescue skills.
Cliff bands, gullies, and tree clusters below ski lines turn survivable slides fatal. PeakScout does not map terrain traps. Identification requires field assessment and formal training — not app data.
NARSIS from tree wells kills skiers in deep-snow forests, in sight of partners, in minutes. PeakScout provides no tree well risk data. Never ski alone in deep-snow tree terrain.
Colorado winter temperatures at elevation can drop below -20°F with wind chill. Extended backcountry travel — particularly after a fall, injury, or navigation error — creates life-threatening exposure conditions. Always carry layering, emergency bivy, and firestarter.
Cell coverage is absent across most Colorado backcountry terrain. Satellite communication is required, not optional. PeakScout's online interface is inaccessible in the field on most approaches and descents.
SAR response times of 2–6+ hours are standard for Colorado backcountry. Partner rescue is the only realistic survival system for avalanche burial. Formal rescue training and current season practice are mandatory preparation.
PeakScout is a data aggregation and briefing platform. It is not an avalanche safety consultant, guide service, route planner, or emergency alert system for Colorado backcountry skiing.
TO THE MAXIMUM EXTENT PERMITTED BY COLORADO LAW, INCLUDING THE COLORADO RECREATIONAL USE STATUTE (CRS § 33-41-101 ET SEQ.), PEAKSCOUT SHALL NOT BE LIABLE FOR ANY INJURY, DEATH, OR PROPERTY DAMAGE ARISING FROM: (1) RELIANCE ON CAIC AVALANCHE FORECAST DATA DISPLAYED BY PEAKSCOUT, INCLUDING ZONE-LEVEL DANGER RATINGS, AVALANCHE PROBLEM DESCRIPTIONS, OR SUPPLEMENTARY SNOWPACK INFORMATION; (2) RELIANCE ON SNOTEL SNOWPACK, SNOW DEPTH, OR SNOW WATER EQUIVALENT DATA; (3) WEATHER FORECAST INFORMATION INCLUDING WIND, TEMPERATURE, OR PRECIPITATION DATA; (4) ABSENCE OF TERRAIN TRAP, CLIFF BAND, TREE WELL, CORNICE, OR OTHER TERRAIN HAZARD INFORMATION; (5) ROAD ACCESS STATUS OR ROAD CLOSURE INFORMATION; (6) FAILURE TO OBTAIN ADEQUATE AVALANCHE EDUCATION, RESCUE TRAINING, OR APPROPRIATE EQUIPMENT; (7) ANY BACKCOUNTRY SKIING, SNOWBOARDING, SKIING, SNOWSHOEING, OR MOUNTAINEERING DECISION MADE IN RELIANCE ON DATA DISPLAYED BY PEAKSCOUT; OR (8) DELAYED OR UNAVAILABLE SEARCH AND RESCUE RESPONSE. THIS LIMITATION SUPPLEMENTS THE FEDERAL LAND LIABILITY DISCLAIMER — BOTH APPLY TO COLORADO BACKCOUNTRY SKIING USE.
To confirm you have read and understood this disclaimer, type your full legal name below as your digital signature. This constitutes a legally binding acknowledgment under Colorado and federal law.