Mountain Weather 12/8/2017

CB Avalanche CenterWeather

Date: 12/08/2017

Temperatures are 20 degrees warmer than yesterday morning, as northwest winds have fought off frigid inversions under clear skies. Same weather, different day as the impressive ridging along the Pacific coast hangs tough and sends all moisture clear up into the Yukon and away from the western United States. Expect more sun, and breezy northwesterly winds above timberline. We will see a gradual warm up over the next several days, with no precipitation in sight.

  • Today

    High Temperature: 25-30
    Winds/Direction: 10-15/N
    Sky Cover: Clear
    Irwin Snow: 0
    Elkton Snow: 0
    Friend’s Hut Snow: 0

  • Tonight

    High Temperature: 10
    Winds/Direction: 5-15/NNW
    Sky Cover: Clear
    Irwin Snow: 0
    Elkton Snow: 0
    Friend’s Hut Snow: 0

  • Tomorrow

    High Temperature: 30-35
    Winds/Direction: 5-15/NW
    Sky Cover: Clear
    Irwin Snow: 0
    Elkton Snow: 0
    Friend’s Hut Snow: 0

Mountain Weather 12/7/2017

CB Avalanche CenterWeather

Date: 12/07/2017

That was a chilly night; the coldest of the season so far for our alpine terrain. Under the influence of the North winds, our temperature inversion broke down last night, with sub-zero temps measured up high and low’s in the single digits around the valley floor.
This cooling pattern will continue throughout the day, and the North winds will blow stronger than what we’ve seen all week as this Northerly jet stream slides overhead. This same North flow will build clouds over the high peaks, maybe even dropping a snowflake or two over the Divide or the upper Brush Creek zones. Rest assured, the Pacific coast deflector shield remains intact, and tomorrow we’ll be back to mostly clear skies and start into a gradual warming trend to carry us through the weekend.

  • Today

    High Temperature: 10
    Winds/Direction: 10 to 20, gusting to 40, North
    Sky Cover: Increasing clouds
    Irwin Snow: 0
    Elkton Snow: 0
    Friend’s Hut Snow: 0

  • Tonight

    High Temperature: 5
    Winds/Direction: 10 to 20, gusting to 40, North
    Sky Cover: Partly Cloudy
    Irwin Snow: 0
    Elkton Snow: 0
    Friend’s Hut Snow: 0

  • Tomorrow

    High Temperature: 20
    Winds/Direction: 10 to 20, gusting to 50, North
    Sky Cover: Mostly Clear
    Irwin Snow: 0
    Elkton Snow: 0
    Friend’s Hut Snow: 0

Mountain Weather 12/6/2017

CB Avalanche CenterWeather

Date: 12/06/2017

It’s pretty simple. Cool, and dry for the foreseeable future. This afternoon and through tomorrow, we’ll see a few clouds and an increase in winds as a small arctic blip strafes over the Front Range.

Bottom line, our deflector shield of high pressure parked over the Pacific coast remains operational. This anomalous ridge on the left coast coupled with a deep digging trough of low pressure over the Midwest will keep the north flow pouring down on the Rockies and Crested Butte today, and tomorrow, and the day after, and the day after…

Have you ever seen Edvard Munch’s painting The Scream? Well that’s what the atmosphere over the Pacific looks like right now.

The Garage Interview: The History of CBAC According to Than

RobStricklandNews

The good folks over at The Garage Street Journal love the chance to invite local legends into the garage studio.  With the annual Avalanche Awareness Night coming up, we welcomed Than Acuff – who is not just a pretty face, but also a proud member of the board for The Crested Butte Avalanche Center – with open arms full of his ‘demands’, which were a bowl of green M&Ms, beef taquitos, Redbulls, and a Hooters Girl.  Sitting with Than, we got to know the gentleman a little better and also the history of The Crested Butte Avalanche Center and his involvement with the organization.  If anyone was on the fence about attending Avalanche Awareness Night, sit back, listen, and get filled with stoke because, as always, this event is going to be incredible.

 

Mountain Weather 12/5/2017

CB Avalanche CenterWeather

Date: 12/05/2017

The little storm that blew is now well in our rearview mirror, having left behind seasonably chilly temps and not much else. In the short term, we can expect light North winds, clear skies and growing inversions, meaning warmer temps up high and colder temps in the valley floors as the cold air sinks.
Looking further ahead, we’re in for a dry spell. Or as the National Weather Service put it, the high pressure now covering the western US “spells doom for Pacific moisture reaching inland.” Long-range weather models show this giant deflector shield in the sky protecting us from any pesky snowflakes for at least the next week. Looking towards this weekend, as Emperor Palpatine of Star Wars said: “Oh, I’m afraid the deflector shield will be quite operational when your friends arrive.”

Mountain Weather December 4th, 2017

CB Avalanche CenterWeather

Date: 12/04/2017

The 2018 December drying out phase has begun as last nights low-pressure system is heading east. Temperatures have returned to near normal for this time of year, ya that’s way colder then what we’ve been used to lately. Last nights strong winds are on the decrease this morning as well. Clouds will dissipate through the day with a few potentially lingering clouds along the crest of the Ruby Range towards Paradise Divide. The extended December forecast is looking dry with very a small chance of a very small storm later in the week.

Mt. Axtell

CB Avalanche Center2017-18 Observations

Location: Kebler Pass Area
Date of Observation: 12/03/2017
Name: Thomas Ney
Subject: Mt. Axtell
Aspect: North, North East, East
Elevation: 11,000 ft

Avalanches:

Observed an old large debris pile from a wet slide on a North facing slope at around 11,000ft, WS-N-R2-D2/3-O. In the debris there are small trees around 3inches thick that where broken and microwave to large tv size pieces of debris. The avalanche cut out a 5.5 foot trench on the lower angle slopes underneath the steep rocky slopes above (See picture). The surface that was exposed in the trench was isothermal snow (See Picture). The avalanche or avalanches must have came down from the steep rocky train above after our unseasonable warm up following our last major snow storm on November 18.

Weather: Partly sunny in the morning turning into mostly overcast by mid day. Temps in the morning where in the high 20s and by mid day were near 30 degrees Fahrenheit at 10,000ft to 11,000ft.
Snowpack: So so thin…. My partner and I dug a snow pit on a 27 degree east facing slope around 10,400ft. We found the depth to be 33cm. At the bottom there is a 5cm isothermal crust. After the isothermal crust there is a 12cm of finger density crust. After the finger density crust there is a 13.5cm of facets/sugar snow. On top is a 2.5cm of breakable crust.

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Mountain Weather 12/3/2017

CB Avalanche CenterWeather

Date: 12/03/2017

Currently on Sunday morning conditions are still calm with thin clouds and mild temperatures but that’s all about to change later today. A low-pressure system moving into the northwest US this morning will be passing to our north through tomorrow afternoon. The big news for us with this system will be the winds. Pressure gradients are going to tighten as this trough dips into Colorado with wind gusts exceeding 50mph in the mountains. Those southwest winds will build this afternoon and peak this evening. A cold front will also drastically drop temperatures for the coming day. As it passes this evening we will see a quick burst of snow. The typical snow favored spots in the Kebler Pass and Paradise Divide areas could pick up 4-5” of snow overnight but these areas will be right on the southern edge of the snow forecast, so confiding is low. Conditions will mellow through the day tomorrow as we stare down a dry extended forecast for the week and beyond.

Upper Slate Recon

CB Avalanche Center2017-18 Observations

Location: Paradise Divide Area
Date of Observation: 12/02/2017
Name: Ian Havlick
Subject: Upper Slate Recon
Aspect: North, North East, East, South
Elevation: 10-11,500

Avalanches:  Observed several D1 wet loose avalanches that looked a few days old, and one wet loose triggered persistent slab below steep cliffed terrain on a northeast facing slope near treeline. Observed through binoculars and did not investigated, but debris looked to have run like a wet loose, scouring to talus below.

Weather: Scuddy clouds this morning cleared to partly cloudy skies midday, occasional high clouds during the afternoon. Very warm temperatures with 46º in valley, and 41º at 11,000ft at 1500. Skiff of new snow from flurry overnight.

Snowpack: Quite low snowpack overall with dry conditions on south and west facing slopes near and below treeline. On shady north and northeast facing slopes, snowpack varied between shallow, moist, isothermal snow near and below treeline to more faceted snowpack with thickening, slick surface crusts 5-8cm thick.

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Mountain Weather 12/2/2017

CB Avalanche CenterWeather

Date: 12/02/2017

High and dry today with a few passing high clouds ejecting out of the desert southwest. Temperatures will again run several degrees above normal, with light west-southwest winds at higher elevations. Tomorrow will again be mild, as southwest flow strengthens and brings us that desert warmth ahead of a minor disturbance arriving midday. Don’t expect too much out of this storm, but maybe if we undersell it, the storm will over deliver? Long term looks bleak if you are hoping for snow.