Many people were doing that In the Glen Alps area during
the daylight hours leading up to Christmas Eve.
Once news of Rudd's disappearance hit the television and newspapers, nearly 40 of
them called Chugach Park officials to report seeing the skier or someone fitting
his description, Meiners said.
At least three of the reports turned out to be solid, said Lewanski. After
piecing together the accounts, researchers think Rudd skied downhill along the popular
Middle Fork trail for six or seven miles to an intersection with a trail from the
Prospect Heights trailhead.
Rudd talked to some other skiers at the intersection before turning around and starting
back, Lewanski said.
Long day trips like this were not uncommon for Rudd.
"This was his main interest - outdoor recreation," said Dan Hourihan of the Alaska
Mountain Rescue Group. "He was a zero body fat individual."
At Rudd's home, investigators found a detailed training log, the kind kept by serious
athletes. It told the story of someone dedicated to staying fit, someone who
had accumulated a wealth of outdoor experience.
"The guy has real good skills,'' Meiners said. "From all we can tell, he's
a very cautious, methodical person. He didn't take chances.
"He was also a gear-head, a big-time gear-head."
In fact, various investigators said, it is hard to believe you could find anyone
much better outfitted or physically prepared for a day of skiing on the Middle Fork
trail than Rudd.
To him, they said, the Christmas Eve outing was probably just another easy day trip
to an area of the park free of avalanche hazard.
Rudd never told anyone where was going. But many of the people searching for
his body on Thursday said they'd done the same kind of thing many times and considered
it safe.
And most indications suggest that the first part of Rudd's ski trip went fine, Hourihan
said.
After turning around at the lower end of the Middle Fork Trail he skied the six
or seven miles back through the woods onto the windswept, snow-covered alpine tundra
near the Glen Alps parking lot, according to witnesses.
They reported a skier fitting Rudd's description near the creek less than a mile
from the parking lot, Fesler said.
Joe Kurtak, a member of the Nordic Ski Patrol, watched the man ski down a steep
hill on the west side of the creek, fall down and spend an unusually long time on
the snow before getting up, Fesler said.
Kurtak was concerned enough about the fall that he dug out a pair of binoculars
and watched the man that searchers are now confident was Rudd.
After three or four minutes, Fesler said, the man got up, started making his way
toward the bridge across the creek and to well-traveled trail that leads from there
to Glen Alps.
Given the short distance from bridge to the parking lot and the fact that there
were still other skiers in the area, Kurtak decided Rudd was in no trouble and went
off on his own ski trip.
Rudd was never seen again.
What happened between the bridge and the parking lot has been the source of much
speculation.
"It's real strange,'' said Meiners. "We don't think he lost it from exhaustion.
He was a real fit guy. Maybe a fall, maybe illness."
"It's possible he went up on Flattop (Mountain)'' said Hourihan. Rudd could
have decided to make a few ski turns before going back to the car and ended up caught
in an avalanche.
"That's always a possibility," Hourihan said, "but it's unusual. He was very
close to his car".
Fesler organized searches of several small avalanches in the area soon after Rudd's
truck was found. Searchers found nothing, but in the intervening four days,
winds up to 70 mph had shifted snow all over the place.
Eventually, the winds transformed the area into a wind-blasted zone of grass blown
bare and snow drifted 6 or 7 feet deep around stands of mountain hemlock and alders.
Fesler, Hourihan and others now believe Rudd's body is buried in one of those drifts.
Perhaps, Fesler speculates, some sort of catastrophic illness befell Rudd, and he
crawled off the trail into the lee of a mountain hemlock for shelter - only to die
and later be buried by drifting snow.
On Thursday Fesler stood on a hill above the bridge where Rudd was last seen.
He could point to places around him where the avalanche expert had helped organize
searches to recover other bodies in other years. Just across the valley, he'd
helped find the body of a 16-year-old killed by hypothermia more than two decades
ago.
"He was lost," Fesler said. "He was lost right within sight of the lights
of Anchorage".
No one believes Rudd was lost, though. That is but one of the reasons his
disappearance is so baffling. Nothing got clearer after another day of searching.
"There's always the chance of foul play or he was ducking out of the country or
something," Meiners said, "but that would be an odd one. At this point, we
still think there's a high likelihood he's out there somewhere."
Missing skier positively identified
ADN 5/16/95
The medical examiner's office in Anchorage has confirmed that a body found in Campbell
Creek over the weekend is that of a cross-country skier missing for more than four
months. A hiker found the body of Jeffrey Rudd, 38, floating in the creek
in Chugach State Park, authorities said. Rudd, from Anchorage, was last seen
on Christmas Eve while cross-country skiing near the Glen Alps. Search crews
spent days looking for the missing skier without any success. Rudd apparently
broke through some ice and fell into the creek, said Al Meiners, superintendent
of Chugach State Park.