Poverty Gulch

CB Avalanche Center2019-20 Observations

Location: Paradise Divide Area
Date of Observation: 12/01/2019
Name: Evan Ross

Subject: Poverty Gulch
Aspect: South East, South
Elevation: 9,900-11,900

Avalanches: Carnage all over the place from the 11/30 natural avalanche cycle. The total tally of observed avalanches from Eric and I is in his observation here. The only additional notable avalanche was the large natural on the South side of Mineral Point. This avalanche initiated in the upper cliffs as a windslab. when that cascaded into the apron below it further propagated in the South facing bowl. I believe the apron propagated on the 11/25th interface, with around a 50cm crown. This is estimated as I didn’t do a crown investigation.

Weather: Beautiful mostly clear day with a few high clouds. Light winds will a small amount of snow continuing to drift.

Snowpack: A couple collapses where old October snow was lingering as a collapsible crust near the ground. This collapsible crust was isolated in the terrain we traveled. Otherwise managed the terrain with the old wind slabs in mine. The 11/29 and 11/25 interfaces didn’t appear that they will pose a persistent issue, but managing the terrain with the old wind-loading in mind was still great travel advice as these interfaces continue to adjust to the new load.

1st major avalanche cycle of the season

CB Avalanche Center2019-20 Observations

Location: Kebler Pass Area
Date of Observation: 12/01/2019
Name: Eric Murrow

Subject: 1st major avalanche cycle of the season
Aspect: North, North East, East, South East, South, South West, West, North West
Elevation: 9000′ – 11,650′

Avalanches:

Hot dang, there sure was a natural cycle in the terrain to the northwest of Crested Butte around Saturday 11/30. Heres what was visible from travel through slate river corridor and poverty gulch. Some failed early in storm and refilled while others fail late with sharp crowns.

Climax: 4x-SS-D2.5 NTL NE
Peeler: 1x-SS-D2 NTL E
Redwell: 1x-SS-D2 ATL NE

Schuylkill Ridge:
1xSS-D2-R3-O NTL NE
1xSS-D2-R3-O BTL NE

Schuylkill Peak:
1x-SS-D2.5 NTL NE
1x-SS-D2.5 NTL N (Baxter Basin)

Schuylkill SubPeak:
1xSS-D2 NTL ENE
1xSS-D2.5 NTL N
3xSS-D1.5 NTL NW

Daisy Pass:
1xSS-D2 NTL E
2xSS-D1.5 NTL NE

Mineral Point: SS-D2.5-R2-I ATL S

Angle Pass:
SS-D2.5-R2-O ATL NE
2xSS-D2 ATL NE
1xSS-D1.5 NE

Afley: 1xSS-D2.5 ATL NE

Weather: Cool day with light winds and decent solar. Overall a comfortable day. No transport observed during the day.
Snowpack: Traveled on mainly south and southeast aspects in the poverty gulch area. HS on these aspects was roughly around 50 to 60cm (much of the terrain we moved through was open and susceptible to wind transport so HS across terrain was variable). Much of this terrain was dry prior to Nov 20th storm with only drifted features holding on to old crust or very isolated facet/crust set up. We did experience a couple of collapses but on isolated wind whales. Interfaces from Nov 25th and Nov 29th storm did not appear concerning or produce results in hasty hand tests, no cracking observed. Snowpack on these sunny slopes was surprisingly supportive to skis.

Photos:

Partial burial at anthracites

CB Avalanche Center2019-20 Observations

Location: Kebler Pass Area
Date of Observation: 12/01/2019
Name: Lee pow

Subject: Partial burial at anthracites
Aspect: North, North East, North West
Elevation:

Avalanches:

Big chute on anthracites. Dropped 3 cornices on big chute from the overhead cornices skiers left at top of run. Most of the gut of the run slid below the first tree band/rollover, 100cm to ground. Proceeded down the run and stopped at first safe zone on skiers right, when I peeled back onto the run, some hangfire caught me and carried me 100 feet, buried to neck. Self rescue.

Dug an ect at the bottom of the run before dropping (thought a lower pit would be more indicative of the line vs digging above)
Lots of spatial variability

Talking to others at the sleds, many cracks were observed everywhere at the cites, but 7th bowl, due to buried weak layer. One crack was reported to move ~4 feet but did not run.

Weather: Clear and cold
Snowpack: About 100cm

Photos: added by CBAC forecast staff on 12/3.  Photos from 12/2 site visit

Whoomphing/collapsing Slate River area

CB Avalanche Center2019-20 Observations

Location: Paradise Divide Area
Date of Observation: 11/30/2019
Name:

Subject: Whoomphing/collapsing Slate River area
Aspect: North, North East
Elevation: 10,000-11,000 ft

Avalanches: 

None observed, however we did observe several major collapses and some cracking in flat areas as well as some 30 degree test slopes

Weather: Cold, snowing S1/S2, blowing snow, sustained northwesterly winds with elevated gusts

Snowpack: Thin with nearly no structure below treeline, increasing structure and snow height up to 3 ft near and above treeline with some definite evidence of recent slab formation

 

Mountain Weather for 11,000ft

CB Avalanche CenterWeather

Date: 12/01/2019

BRRRRRR….This morning sure feels like classic Gunnison Valley. As the storm moved out yesterday and skies cleared, temperatures dropped for valley bottom locations overnight reaching single digits below zero. Temperatures are a bit more comfortable at mountain locations sitting a little above zero. A ridge of high pressure is building over Colorado for the next few days, but a weak short wave disturbance will brush by the northern part of the state on Monday but will do little more than produce some clouds for our area. High pressure looks to persist through the middle of the week before a system works its way into the Four Corners area later in the week.

For today you can expect temperatures to rebound to more comfortable levels and winds should ease back throughout the days as well. Today is looking like a crisp, sunny Colorado day.

  • Today

    High Temperature: 21 to 25
    Winds/Direction: 5 to 15, WNW
    Sky Cover: Clear
    Irwin Snow: 0″
    Elkton Snow: 0″
    Friend’s Hut Snow: 0″

  • Tonight

    Low Temperature: 8 to 12
    Winds/Direction: 4 to 14, WNW
    Sky Cover: Mostly Clear
    Irwin Snow: 0″
    Elkton Snow: 0″
    Friend’s Hut Snow: 0″

  • Tomorrow

    High Temperature: 27 to 31
    Winds/Direction: 3 to 13, WSW
    Sky Cover: Mostly Clear
    Irwin Snow: 0″
    Elkton Snow: 0″
    Friend’s Hut Snow: 0″

Still Hitting Rocks

CB Avalanche Center2019-20 Observations

Location: Paradise Divide Area
Date of Observation: 11/30/2019
Name: SydD

Subject: Still Hitting Rocks
Aspect: South West
Elevation: 11500

Avalanches:

N/A

Weather: A beautiful overcast day, light snowfall (s1), and blistering moderate winds from the west/southwest. Snow and winds relaxed early in the afternoon, chilly all-day
Snowpack: Traveled across large wind whales, and while accending witnessed loud whupping and a few shooting cracks while skiing. The storm dropped close to 10″, but still a very shallow snowpack. No avalanches to report.

Photos:

SW Pow

CB Avalanche Center2019-20 Observations

Location: Paradise Divide Area
Date of Observation: 11/30/2019
Name: Evan Ross

Subject: SW Pow
Aspect: South, South West
Elevation: 11,000-11,500

Weather: I hiked around with 2 base layers, a softshell, a harder shell, and a big puffy with the hood up. Ooo hiked with my goggles on too. That should explain the weather best to us average people. I’m still cold. Maybe I’m just getting soft? Anyway, the down-valley winds were cranking and continuing to drift snow through the day, while the temperatures where cold. The nearby Cinnamon Weather Stations at 12,100ft showed W-NW winds around 30mph and a high temp of 1 degree. Poor vis with obscured to mostly cloudy sky.

Snowpack: Traveled on very specific SW slopes in the 34-37 degree range on average. Line everything up right, and the skiing was great without the avalanche issue on the other side of the compass. Line it up wrong, and the slope could be blown off by the wind, lacking enough snowpack at too low an elevation, or cross-loaded with a 1 to 2ft deep windslab.

Given the variability and the targeted objectives for skiing its hard to generalize a SW aspect at this elevation. Most SW and south slopes around these elevations are holding a thin snowpack without a current avalanche problem. Add in some more specific variables and you could run into a few more issues. The shaded sides of gullies are holding the old weak October snow. The 11/20 crust can be thick and strong on steep slopes, non-existent on lower angled slopes, and of course transitional in between. Next to the wind-slab avalanche problem, this 11/20 crust was the main potential weak-layer to manage. We had plenty of large collapses while traveling from low angled slopes to a steeper slope, or through sparse trees creating a variable snowpack structure.

Coney’s

CB Avalanche Center2019-20 Observations

Location: Crested Butte Area
Date of Observation: 11/30/2019
Name: Eric Murrow & Zach Kinler

Subject: Coney’s
Aspect: North, North East, East
Elevation: 9600′-10,800′

Avalanches: Two avalanches intentionally and remotely triggered from the ridgetop. D1 and D1.5. The bigger remotely triggered avalanche was not enough to bury a person but accelerated and ran about 400 vertical feet. You would have been seriously bunged up if you took this ride.

Weather: OVC, Light and variable winds in sheltered below tree line terrain, moderate WNW winds at ridgetop, intermittent S-1 with less than 1-inch accumulation. Cold with temps in the upper teens.

Snowpack: HS 50-60 cm in sheltered terrain. Very little old snow existed in this non-drifted low elevation terrain near the interior part of the range away from the snow belt. No cracking or collapsing observed on the sheltered skin track. Once on the ridgeline where moderate winds have drifted new snow, we immediately experienced collapses and cracking within the drifted snow. In this area immediately lee of the ridge, the October snow was much more continuous as well due to previous wind loading. Traversing the ridgetop, we were able to trigger two avalanches, D1-D1.5 in size. Once off the ridgeline and below previous and current drifting, signs of instability stopped as the weak layer was more discontinuous and thin.

Photos:

Shattery

CB Avalanche Center2019-20 Observations

Location: Crested Butte Area
Date of Observation: 11/30/2019
Name:

Subject: Shattery
Aspect: North East
Elevation: BTL

Avalanches:

none seen but no vis

Weather: Light snow off and on, moderate wind gusts.
Snowpack: Knee deep in protected N and NE slopes, 6-10 inches total on NE slopes in the open. Plenty of collapsing/cracking on skin up, protected glades in the 30-degree range N/NE shattered upon first turn but no movement.

Photos:

Gothic Townsite 5:30am Obs

CB Avalanche Center2019-20 Observations

Location: Crested Butte Area
Date of Observation: 11/30/2019
Name: billy barr

Subject: Gothic Townsite 5:30am Obs

Weather: Generally steady but light snow overnight with moderate wind as snow continues. So far 3½” overnight with 0.31″ water and for the past 22 hours there has been 7½” with 0.61″of water and snowpack is up to 12″ deep. Wind continues moderate and gusting (4-8 W gusts to 15) with light snow and temperature is 11F with the range since midnight a low of 10F and high of 12F. I will update a bit after 7 a.m. billy