What Is an Avalanche Shovel?

An avalanche shovel is a compact, collapsible shovel with a sturdy metal (usually aluminum) blade, carried by every backcountry traveler to dig out a buried victim quickly and to dig snow pits for snowpack assessment. Avalanche debris sets up dense and hard, so a strong metal blade is essential — plastic shovels are inadequate. It's the third piece of the beacon-shovel-probe rescue kit.

SnowsportsAvalanche SafetyBeginner
An avalanche shovel is a compact, collapsible shovel with a sturdy metal (usually aluminum) blade, carried by every backcountry traveler to dig out a buried victim quickly and to dig snow pits for snowpack assessment. Avalanche debris sets up dense and hard, so a strong metal blade is essential — plastic shovels are inadequate. It's the third piece of the beacon-shovel-probe rescue kit.
What it isCollapsible metal-bladed snow shovel
BladeAluminum (not plastic)
Used forDigging out victims; snow pits
Part ofBeacon + shovel + probe kit

An avalanche shovel is a compact, collapsible shovel with a sturdy metal (usually aluminum) blade, carried by every backcountry traveler to dig out a buried victim quickly and to dig snow pits for snowpack assessment. Avalanche debris sets up dense and hard, so a strong metal blade is essential — plastic shovels are inadequate. It’s the third piece of the beacon-shovel-probe rescue kit.

This is general educational information, not avalanche training.

The dig

The final tool in avalanche rescue, after the beacon and probe; also digs pits to assess the snowpack.

Frequently asked questions

What is an avalanche shovel?

An avalanche shovel is a strong, lightweight, collapsible shovel — with a separable metal blade and handle — carried in the pack for backcountry travel. Its main job is to dig out a buried avalanche victim fast, and it's also used to dig snow pits for assessing the snowpack.

Why can't you use a plastic shovel?

Avalanche debris compacts into extremely hard, dense, set-up snow that plastic blades can't cut or chip effectively and may break against. A sturdy metal (aluminum) blade is necessary to move that concrete-like snow quickly during the time-critical dig to reach a buried victim.

Is digging out a victim fast enough just about the shovel?

No — efficient, strategic shoveling technique (such as the V-shaped conveyor method for teams) dramatically speeds up extraction, and the dig is often the most time-consuming part of a rescue. That's why avalanche courses teach shoveling technique alongside beacon and probe use; practiced skill matters as much as the tool.

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