Skier triggered avalanche

CB Avalanche Center2016-17 Observations

Location: Paradise Divide Area
Date of Observation: 03/05/2017
Name:
Subject: Skier triggered avalanche
Aspect: North East, East
Elevation: 11600

Avalanches: Skier triggered slide, D2, on Daisy pass within 15′ of saddle. 100′ wide and ran approx 1000′ from a 6″-24″ crown. No skiers caught or injured.
Weather: Mostly bluebird
Snowpack: Wind effect on all aspects from soft to moderate slabbing.

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Lower Snodgrass

CB Avalanche Center2016-17 Observations

Location: Crested Butte Area
Date of Observation: 03/04/2017
Name: Chris Pruden
Subject: Lower Snodgrass
Aspect: North East
Elevation: 9600-9200

Avalanches: At 9600 on the Gothic Road (about 1/2 mile from the trailhead). We saw a recent R3 D1 slab avalanche that had released naturally on the steep NE facing road cut. The slope angle of the terrain was about 40 degrees. Active wind loading seemed to be the trigger. (Edit: Snowcat Triggered)
Weather: Scattered clouds and some gusty winds throughout the day, especially near the Snodgrass trailhead. We saw some blowing snow in these more exposed areas. Air temp around 40 degrees F at 1PM. No precip.
Snowpack: Dug in the snow at 9460 on a 29 degree NNE slope. Found a thick and distinct crust layer at around 50 cm down with some variable (but overall soft) layers above. Below the crust was a layer of sugary facets but quickly transitioned to more consolidated snow below that. A compression test revealed an easy (3 taps), sudden, and planar fracture at 30 cm down. An ECT showed full and planar propagation on 3 taps at the same layer. These results occurred on buried near-surface facets (1cm). Touring off the road revealed some localized collapsing around skis but nothing shooting across terrain and no loud whumping.

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CBAC Snodgrass Study Plot Snowpit

CB Avalanche Center2016-17 Observations

Location: Crested Butte Area
Date of Observation: 03/03/2017
Name: Arden Feldman
Subject: CBAC Snodgrass Study Plot Snowpit
Aspect: North East
Elevation: 9760

Avalanches: None.
Weather: Calm, clear, and warm!
Snowpack: See Profile

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Remotely Triggered Avalanche Purple Palace

CB Avalanche Center2016-17 Observations

Location: Paradise Divide Area
Date of Observation: 03/04/2017
Name: Ian Havlick/Evan Ross
Subject: Remotely Triggered Avalanche Purple Palace
Aspect: North East, East, South East, South
Elevation: 9100-11300

Avalanches: Remotely triggered large persistent slab avalanche 150 feet away from small knoll to the slope below. Stepped out of skis to rip skins, as well as Evan arriving at same time. No collapse to initiate slide, no whoomps, just a silent, spooky, killer. Slide failed ~200ft wide, ran 1000ft down slope, breaking at a 29-30º slope, then rolling over to steeper, upper 30º degree terrain. Slab was F>1F hard, failing on F-hard 1-2mm facets, resting above 1F hard dense bed surface, with some crusts found on bed surface as we descended slide path.

Lots of evidence of prior avalanches on Schuykill, and lee terrain off Purple Ridge. Tried to get eyes on north side of Mount Baldy as observers reported very large avalanche running across Schofield Pass summer road.
Weather: Very warm temperatures below treeline, still chilly up high. TH temp was 26º at 1330. Westerly winds increased throughout afternoon into 30-40mph range.
Snowpack: Variable surface conditions, from breaker death crust to soft, cold, faceted surface powder. HS is..Deep, 250cm+. Misleading surface conditions lead you to believe the slab has “faceted out” or baked and crusted….but this is most definitely NOT the case. Several pits at various east facing elevations revealed widespread persistent slab structure with a 60-80cm slab resting on the double crust facet sandwich, or on colder, northerly slopes, a thin, but weak layer of 1-2mm buried near surface facets. Multiple and repeatable ECTP22, 24 Sudden Planar, and CTH SP.

Increasing westerly winds into 40mph range created moderate wind transported snow on lee terrain after 1500.

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CB Avalanche Center2016-17 Observations

Location: Kebler Pass Area
Date of Observation: 03/04/2017
Name: Donny
Subject:
Aspect: North, West
Elevation: 8,800’ to 12,000′

Avalanches:
Weather: Sunny for most of the day, with high, pre-frontal clouds in the middle of the day. No precip, but plenty of strong radiation. Light winds with moderate gusts above 11,000’. It was plenty warm.
Snowpack: Snow surface continues to facet on northern aspects. We found several pockets of large SH in very sheltered areas. Sunny aspects had up to a 5cm MF crust on surface. No signs of instabilities were observed.

February 10th – 16th: Warm Temperatures with Snow and Low Elevation Rain

CBAC2016 - 17 Weekly Snowpack Summaries, Weekly Snowpack Summaries

By Arden Feldman            CBAC Intern

The week started off balmy on February 10th with warm, moist southwest flow issuing in record high temperatures for the second day in a row. billy barr’s Gothic weather station recorded a record high of 48 degrees. A closed low off of the California coast began streaming unusually warm Pacific moisture into Colorado during the evening of the 10th. This caused increasing clouds and precipitation to filter into the region with strong winds. The freezing level was around 10,000 feet, so downtown Crested Butte and many below tree line slopes received rain, while higher elevations received dense snow. Winds on the 10th averaged 24 mph and gusted up to 89 mph at 11,000 ft. On the evening of the 11th, a cold front passed overhead sparking heavy snowfall and allowing temperatures to finally drop below freezing throughout the forecast area. By the morning of the 12th, 3” of SWE and 19” of snow had accumulated at Schofield Pass, and 14” of snow was reported at CBMR.

2/11/17 – Satellite image showing the Pacific moisture flowing into Colorado.

 

On the 12th, the atmospheric flow split around Colorado with the main flow to our north and the cut off low to our south. The low was still sending some leftover moisture into our area with a southerly flow, causing light snow showers.. The flow then began to dry out, beginning a clearing and warming trend through the rest of the week. On the 14th there was a high of 22F at 11,000 ft but by the 16th, there was a high of 44F with beautiful clear skies.

2/16/17 – Satellite image showing clear skies over Colorado.

 

Persistent slabs on buried surface hoar layers on northerly and easterly aspects remained a problem this week. This week’s storm added a significant new load to the snowpack and tested the persistent weak layers, and we observed a handful of natural avalanches failing on buried surface hoar or facets again. The instabilities became increasingly isolated and stubborn through the week, but they were still present and sadly consequential, resulting in Colorado’s first fatality of the season in the Flat Tops. The storm also resulted in storm slab concerns, but few were reported likely due to the limited visibility during the storm.

2/14/17 – Natural D2 slab avalanche on a northeast aspect of Mt. Axtell.

 

2/14/17 – Persistent slab avalanche in the Flat Tops zone that resulted in the first avalanche fatality of the season in Colorado.

 

2/14/16 – Natural slab avalanche on a northeast aspect that appeared to fail on surface hoar.

 

2/10/17 – CBAC Snodgrass Snow Study Plot profile showing the problematic surface hoar layer.

 

The warm temperatures and low elevation rain during the week resulted in wet avalanche problems. Relatively small but potentially consequential natural (here, here, here) and skier triggered wet loose avalanches were observed throughout the week, and with the rain below tree line, and several wet slab avalanches were also observed.

2/17/17 – Wet loose avalanche cycle on east, south and west aspects.

 

2/19/17 – D2 wet slab avalanche on a south aspect ATL.

Fresh persistent slab in Red Lady Bowl

CB Avalanche Center2016-17 Observations

Location: Crested Butte and Kebler Pass Areas
Date of Observation: 03/04/2017
Name: Zach Guy
Subject: Fresh persistent slab in Red Lady Bowl
Aspect: South East
Elevation: Near treeline

Avalanches: Fresh slab avalanche in Red Lady Bowl; first noticed the crown early this morning so I assume it was human triggered yesterday. It ran the full width of a relatively small feature mid-track in the bowl (SE aspect NTL), estimated 700 feet wide, 100 vertical, and 2 feet deep. SS-U-R1-D1.5-O
Weather: Strong SW winds. Few clouds. Temps rose into the 30’s.
Snowpack: Surface warming was minimal today on high elevation southerly aspects due to the strong winds, so no wet avalanche concerns where we traveled.

Mountain Weather

CB Avalanche CenterWeather

Date: 03/04/2017

The axis of high pressure passed overhead last night, opening the doors to warmer southwest flow ahead of the next Pacific trough. There is enough high-level moisture for a few thin clouds today, and winds will begin to increase. Tie down your children and small pets tomorrow, winds will be gusting beyond 60 mph as the trough makes landfall. Snowfall will spread into the Elk Mountains by Sunday evening, and we can look forward to a relatively modest refresh by Monday morning, in the 4-8″ range.

Mt. Emmons

CB Avalanche Center2016-17 Observations

Location: Crested Butte Area
Date of Observation: 03/03/2017
Name: Donny
Subject: Mt. Emmons
Aspect: North
Elevation: 9,000’ to 11,400′

Avalanches:
Weather: Clear, calm, and temps that got close to 0ºC.
Snowpack: Avg SkiPen: 10cm – Avg BootPen: 30cm. North aspects stayed cold and dry. Upper 15cm is faceting. No signs of instabilities.