snowboarding









BCA — Backcountry Access — is one of the most trusted names in avalanche safety globally. Founded in Boulder, Colorado with a singular focus on backcountry safety, BCA makes beacons, probes, shovels and airbag packs that are designed to perform when it matters most. The TrackerDTS beacon in particular has been a standard in the global backcountry community for decades. We stock the BCA range at our Richmond showroom alongside our full backcountry safety collection — free shipping Australia-wide, authorised Australian dealer.
Why BCA
BCA builds gear for the specific demands of avalanche rescue — not general alpine equipment adapted for the task. Every product in the range is designed around the reality of what needs to happen in an avalanche scenario: fast beacon signal acquisition, rapid probe assembly and powerful shovelling under pressure. The brand has a long track record in the Australian backcountry community and is one of the most commonly used beacon brands among guides and experienced tourers riding the Bogong High Plains and Kosciuszko Main Range.
The BCA Range
- BCA Tracker beacons — the Tracker series is BCA's flagship avalanche beacon line. Three-antenna digital transceivers with fast signal acquisition and clear display. The Tracker S is the accessible entry point; the Tracker4 adds multiple burial marking and advanced features for more experienced users. Both are suitable for Australian backcountry conditions.
- BCA probes — aluminium and carbon probes in 240cm and 300cm lengths. Fast deployment, reliable locking mechanism, clear depth markings. 240cm is adequate for most Australian touring; 300cm for deeper snowpack terrain.
- BCA shovels — metal blade shovels with extendable shafts and large scoop area. The Dozer and Torpedo are the key models — both are genuine rescue shovels, not packable compromises. The blade size and shaft extension matter enormously for the speed of extraction.
- BCA Float airbag packs — avalanche airbag packs with deployable balloon systems. The Float series uses either a compressed air canister or an electric fan system. Airbag packs reduce burial depth in certain avalanche scenarios and are a meaningful addition to your safety system, not a replacement for beacon, probe and shovel.
The Non-Negotiable Rule
Every person in the group carries a beacon, probe and shovel — every tour, no exceptions. Not the most experienced person. Not just the leader. Every person. Avalanche rescue is a group effort and every individual needs to be independently equipped and trained to conduct a search and extraction. If one person in your group doesn't have all three items, the group's rescue capability is critically reduced.
Carrying gear and knowing how to use it are two different things. We strongly recommend AST 1 training before independent backcountry travel. We can demonstrate correct beacon use, probe technique and shovelling strategy for every product we sell — come in and ask.
BCA FAQ
Which BCA beacon should I buy? The Tracker S for a first beacon — clear, fast and reliable. The Tracker4 for riders who want advanced multiple burial features and are spending serious time in the backcountry.
What probe length do I need? 240cm for most Australian touring. 300cm for areas with deeper snowpack potential or more technical terrain.
Is a BCA Float airbag pack worth it? If your budget allows, yes — airbag packs meaningfully improve survival odds in certain avalanche scenarios. They don't replace beacon, probe and shovel. They're an additional layer of protection.
Where can I get AST training in Australia? Several providers run AST 1 courses in Victoria and NSW during the season. Jones also runs Avy Savvy courses through us — see our Jones Avy Savvy article.
Avalanche Beacons · Avalanche Probes · Avalanche Shovels · All Backcountry Safety · Splitboards · How Backcountry Safety Gear Works · Avalanche Safety in Australia










