Dirty Huckin

CBAC2020-21 Observations

Date of Observation: 03/21/2021
Name: Zach Guy

Zone: Northwest Mountains
Location: Peeler Basin
Aspect: North
Elevation: 9500’ to 12,000’

Avalanches: On above treeline, northerly aspects: Ski cut a small wind slab (12” thick) in a steep gulley below a cornice. Unintentionally triggered a small persistent slab (~18” soft slab broke on facets) after hucking a cliff band. The crown broke along the base of the cliff. This was in steep, rocky terrain where the total snowdepth was about 2 feet deep due to previous slides. Also several small natural loose dry avalanches ran today.
Weather: Mostly cloudy with pulses of light snowfall mixed with brief windows of sunshine. Light ridgetop winds with light transport out of the southwest.
Snowpack: 3” to 4” new snow, appeared to bond better to meltfreeze crusts (on E, S aspects) as opposed to dry snow on northerly aspects. Isolated drifts below alpine ridgelines up to 12”, with mixed results from ski cuts. No signs of instability near and below treeline.

 

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Anthracite Mesa-Coneys

CB Avalanche Center2020-21 Observations

Date of Observation: 03/21/2021
Name: Andrew Breibart

Zone: Southeast Mountains
Location: Coneys
Aspect: North East, East
Elevation: BTL

Avalanches: NA-poor visbility.
Weather: Mostly calm winds on the tour with light winds on the ridge line. Skies were obscured and snowfall rate was S1/S2.
On the skin out skies were obstructed with scattered S-1 snowfall. Winds picked up and were light with moderate gusts in the valley bottom.
Snowpack: Less than 3 inches of new snow in the skin track in the morning. On the leeward side of Convex Corner, snow depth was 5 inches. In the valley bottom, snow was not supportive on upper melt freeze crust. Snow in First Bowl was supportive. Triggered a shallow slough in the new snow that traveled on top of the upper melt freeze crust at the entrance to the bowl. The slough had little energy and may have traveled 25 feet.
The skin track on the exit had a trace of new snow.

 

Large natural, repeat offender on Cement

CB Avalanche Center2020-21 Observations

Date of Observation: 03/20/2021
Name: Zach Guy

Zone: Southeast Mountains
Location: North bowl of Cement
Aspect: North
Elevation: 12,000

Avalanches: Large natural persistent slab avalanche ran sometime after Friday at 2 pm. First observed on Saturday from a distance on Star Pass. This path ran back in February. Given the aspect and elevation, this was likely a dry slab that was triggered by surface warming.
 

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Wash Gulch

CB Avalanche Center2020-21 Observations

Date of Observation: 03/20/2021
Name: Cam Smith

Zone: Southeast Mountains
Location:
Aspect: South, West
Elevation:

Avalanches: 1x Wet slab on a W facing BTL slope that seemed to gouge to the ground and ran a surprising distance down a gulley. Maybe 100 ft. wide and ran ~1,000 ft. I like to think it was animal triggered based on the tracks going in then tracks coming out in a lower spot. But that might just be me believing what I want to believe for the sake of drama. (CBAC Note: Comparing some old observations this looks like the crown of an old avalanche reported in February that has a more melted out and wet appearance now. Guess it needs to snow more…)

Weather: Wasn’t the scorcher we expected in the morning

Snowpack: Crusts weren’t quite frozen solid on some lower angle slopes and places with any hint of shade. Loose wet activity on S and W faces of Gothic above treeline. If you dig skiing bulletproof crusts let me know I have all kinds of secrets for finding the least pleasant conditions.

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Gothic Highest Temperature Of The Year

CBAC2020-21 Observations

Date of Observation: 03/19/2021
Name: billy barr

Zone: Southeast Mountains
Location: Gothic

Weather: Not much up but today was the warmest so far this year st 48F and the first day the snow really started to melt on flat ground. Attached is a shot of wet, loose slides between Mt Bellview and the beginning of Rustler’s Gulch. And today is the first day the Robins are here.

Refilled Bed Surface

CBAC2020-21 Observations

Date of Observation: 03/19/2021
Name: Evan Ross

Zone: Southeast Mountains
Location: Carbon
Aspect: North, North East
Elevation: 9,000-12,000ft

Avalanches: More small loose wet avalanches were noted. All small in size. Still lots of terrain that hasn’t shed, if it is going to shed…

Observed 2 other new and notable slab avalanches. They both released since the last round of snow and look reasonably sharp or fresh. These were both viewed from far away so more specific details would just make for a poor estimate. Both failed on NE facing slopes between 11,700ft and 12,000ft. The avalanche on Ohio Peak looked more like a D1.5 while the avalanche out int he West Elks was a D2.

Weather: Some high clouds moved in for part of the mid day, otherwise mostly clear sky. Light winds at ridgeline. HOT. Elkton 11,100ft 49 degrees, CBMR 11,300 39 degrees.

Snowpack: Headed over to some north-facing terrain on Carbon that had previously avalanched back on February 6th. At 10,500ft the average HS was 155cm’s in undisturbed areas. I chose to target a small section of slope in the area where you could still see one of the old crowns running through the slope. North at 10,900ft. Here the HS dropped to right around 100cm. About 40cm’s down there was an obvious interface of fist hard weak facets. On top of those facets was a F to 1F slab. The most recent storm made up the upper 20cm of that slab. As I continued to dig the slope collapsed on those facets and I got the privilege of watching that collapse run through the pit. Stability text complete. Packed up and didn’t overstay my welcome any longer.

The 3/10 interface was under about 20cm of snow at this location. Currently, there didn’t appear to be a notable issue at that interface. So the layer of concern would be on slopes that previously avalanched and have now refilled with enough snow to form a new slab. The warm temps are of course further settling the upper snowpack and low angled northerly facing slopes had a moist snow surface.

Persistent slab hunting

CBAC2020-21 Observations

Date of Observation: 03/18/2021
Name: Zach Guy and Zach Kinler

Zone: Northwest Mountains
Location: Schuylkill Ridge
Aspect: North, North East, East
Elevation: 9,000 to 11,400′

Avalanches: Widespread cycle of small wet loose avalanches today above treeline in the Ruby Range (~40 avalanches), generally D1 in size. We had good views of abundant activity on east through south aspects, limited views of westerly aspects. There were fewer slides that initiated near treeline and only a few slides closer to town on peaks like Gothic and Mt. Emmons. Did not observe any slides below treeline.
One small wet loose triggered a large persistent slab on an east aspect near treeline of Schuylkill Ridge today around noon.
Weather: Few clouds, calm winds, spring-like temps.
Snowpack: Today’s goal was to target persistent slab structures on paths that ran in February on northerly aspects. We sampled the upper flanks of a couple of paths, one that ran in early February and the other that ran in mid-February. Despite a lack of signs of instability and non-propagating failures in multiple test locations, the structures on old bed surfaces don’t inspire a whole lot of confidence. Slabs are generally 40 to 45 cm thick (F to 4F) over Fist hard, 1.5-2.0 mm facets. Instabilities seem fairly isolated for the time being on the slopes we tested, but I would expect that to change with additional loading.

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Slides at Friends Hut

CBAC2020-21 Observations

Date of Observation: 03/17/2021
Name: Morgan Boyles

Zone: Southeast Mountains
Location: Above Friends Hut
Aspect: South West
Elevation: 12,000′

Avalanches: Triggered a SS-ASu-R3-D1.5 on 3/17/21 on a small SW slope at 12k above the Friends Hut. Crown was 4″-8″ and the slide propagated the whole 200′ width of the feature. This ran on the crust buried on 3/10. Several other naturals from the last two to three days observed running below rocks on S, W, and E aspects mostly D1 in size. The largest was almost D2 in size and on a steep W facing slope of Star Peak on the Aspen side of Pearl Pass. Some other small loose wet observed.

 

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