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Swiss alps face shortage of avalanche dog handlers

GenevaTimes by GenevaTimes
January 25, 2025
in Switzerland
Reading Time: 9 mins read
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In Siviez in canton Valais, just twenty or so mountain enthusiasts took the avalanche dog handler training course this week. There are around fifty avalanche dog handlers in the Valais today, around 30% fewer than 20 years ago.

Keystone / Jean-Christophe Bott





Generated with artificial intelligence.

Training courses for handlers of avalanche dogs are struggling to recruit volunteers. Although technology and new tools make it easier to locate skiers buried under the snow, dogs remain essential to rescue operations, experts say.


This content was published on


January 24, 2025 – 11:00

In Siviez in the Swiss canton of Valais, only about 20 mountain enthusiasts took the avalanche dog handler training course last week. There are around 50 such handlers in Valais today – some 30% fewer than 20 years ago.

“You have be available to go into rescue work,” Yvan Morath, head of training for the French-speaking part of Valais, told Swiss public television, RTS. “People prefer to do something else.” Participants also have to be flexible. “You have to commit yourself, attend compulsory training sessions and cantonal courses,” Morath said.

Several requirements

Those interested in taking the course must also have a dog of a certain build as well as pass an entry test to meet certain requirements. “Being active in mountain hiking is a quality that we require of handlers who are familiar with alpine environments,” said Fabien Marmy, one of the course instructors.

Rescue dog handlers must also have an “excellent relation” with their animal, as well as be in good physical condition. “We often work in fairly steep, high-altitude environments,” explained Marmy.

To become fully operational, the course must be taken several days a week for three years. “In the third year, a “C” permit is granted to people who thus become confirmed handlers,” said Marmy. “These people will then be able to manage the safety aspects as well as their dog, have a global vision and organise an avalanche rescue operation.”

Today, dogs are still essential to rescue missions, because not all skiers are equipped with an avalanche victim detector.

“People think that with today’s technology, dogs are no longer relevant,” said Morath. “But in fact, they remain a key component of rescue operations.”

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What’s triggering avalanches?




This content was published on


Mar 16, 2023



Avalanches are hard to predict. Researchers in Davos are simulating the effects of wind on fresh snow to better understand the dangerous phenomenon.



Read more: What’s triggering avalanches?


Translated from French using DeepL/amva/dos

Articles in this story

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What’s triggering avalanches?




This content was published on


Mar 16, 2023



Avalanches are hard to predict. Researchers in Davos are simulating the effects of wind on fresh snow to better understand the dangerous phenomenon.



Read more: What’s triggering avalanches?


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