Date of Observation: 02/16/2023
Name: Evan Ross
Zone: Northwest Mountains
Route Description: Mount Axtell north 9,500-11,500. Evan’s Basin E-SE 9,500-11,300.
Observed avalanche activity: Yes
Avalanches: Looking out from Axtell I just noted a few old, small avalanches near ridgelines. Nothing notable stood out.
Red Lady Bowl looked to have a small wind slab that may have run today, otherwise, it was from yesterday.
One more small wind slab to add onto ZG’s ob that probably ran today in the Whetstone Group. East, 12,000ft.
Weather: Clear and cold. Snow plumes off the high peaks at times throughout the day, becoming more continuous in the afternoon.
Snowpack: On Mt Axtell, the upper snowpack had become notably stiffer when compared to yesterday, from the cold temperatures and previous wind effects. We skied steep slopes to around 40 degrees and didn’t encounter any storm slab avalanche problems. Sluffing was also minimal. Ski quality had decreased from yesterday, but was still good. Recent wind loading patterns are all over the place and not following a specific trend given all the variations in wind direction we have seen. Wind slab travel advice would have been more appropriate than a widespread storm slab avalanche problem today.
Over in Evan’s Basin, the conditions were similar. I didn’t encounter any unstable snow on this quick trip. Wind slab travel advice would have also been more appropriate in that terrain. I targeted a couple of test profiles on east and northeast-facing slopes to look at the 2/13 interface. On a 38-degree east-facing slope at 10,500ft, the 2/13 interface didn’t produce any results and didn’t look very concerning. On a cross-loaded 35-degree NE-facing slope at 11,000ft the 2/13 interface also didn’t produce any test results. Those small facets at the interface were still something to keep an eye on. The density change in the storm snow did produce test results, but snowmobiling through many steep test slopes didn’t produce any signs of instability.
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