Photo: University of Northern Colorado

A father is recalling the gripping details of an avalanche that buried him alive and killed his son.
Now Andy, who is also the President of the University of Northern Colorado, is speaking out about the fatal avalanche.
“I literally had to use my fingertips to dig out a pocket for me to see light and to dig out,” Andy said before opening up about the moment the avalanche happened. “One minute I was skiing and enjoying the powder, and the next minute I was riding what looked like a violent wave of whitewash.”
Obituary

The family is no stranger to outdoor sports. Before his untimely death, Nick and his parents agreed to climb all of Colorado’s mountains, Andy told theGreeley Tribune.Nick conquered 25 while Andy climbed 42. Nick’s mom and Andy’s wife, Kerry Feinstein, has climbed 26.
Andy vowed to complete his son’s goal.
“I will be climbing the ones he didn’t climb,” he told the outlet.
A family friend, Jeff Tori, opened up toDenver’s Fox affiliate KDVRabout the moment he was told about the deadly avalanche. Nick was previously employed at Tori’s company 21s Century Painting for two summers.
“I got a call and they said, ‘did you hear about Andy and Nick?’ and instantly everything just falls inside of you and everything just sinks into your stomach,” said Tori.
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He shared that when Andy first asked him to hire Nick, he didn’t hesitate to say yes.
Speaking about Nick’s kind character, Tori said, “I had an employee who didn’t drive so Nick, for those two summers, picked him up every single day, taking him to work, and took him home every night. This employee would give him gas money.”
He continued, “After that second summer when Nick knew he wasn’t coming back, he gave me a card to give to that employee. Nick had saved all that gas money and gave it back to the employee in a gift card to Trader Joe’s. That was the type of person he was.”
Local volunteer rescue organizationSummit County Rescue Group described the avalanchein a statement, writing that their rescue team was called out to help following a backcountry avalanche with “confirmed burials” around 2:05 p.m. on Saturday.
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The father-and-son skiers had been caught in an avalanche about an hour before, “with the father partially buried and the son fully buried,” the statement said.
Though Andy was able to dig himself out of the snow, he had to ski out of the vicinity to get cell reception, and he called for help around 1:40 pm.
Nick was a senior at Penn State University and was set to graduate in the spring. He previously graduated from Greeley Central High School in 2019,KDVR reported.
Nick’s celebration of life is scheduled for Saturday, Jan. 14 at 2 p.m., according to theGreeley Tribune.His family is asking supporters to make a donation to the Colorado Fourteeners Initiative in Nick’s name.
source: people.com