Location: Crested Butte Area Date of Observation: 12/13/2019 Name: Joey Carpenter
Subject: Storm Break Tour
Aspect: East, South East, South
Elevation: 9400-11900 Avalanches:
From the car (estimated) R1D2 SE face baldy
E face Emmons ridge 11.5k R1D1.5 gouged into scree at the ground on this 40 degree+ (estimate) crown was partially filled by the time I saw this approximately 24 inch deep slide.
Weather: OVC throughout tour from 1430-1700. Break in the storm provided light winds, little to no snowfall. S2 rates started by the time I reached 11k. Westerly winds picked up during my transition causing heavy snow transport along visible ridges.
Snowpack: The higher in elevation, the denser the slab felt through pole probing and quick hand puts. Especially drifted areas. I did get some small collapses but nothing substantial. Slope angles were kept in check and all steep terrain was avoided. Snow totals at 11k were 9 inches.
Location: Kebler Pass Area Date of Observation: 12/13/2019 Name: Irwin Guides
Subject: Irwin Cat Ski Operation
Aspect: South West, West
Elevation: 10-12,000 Weather: Full storm conditions with whiteout conditions above treeline before 1300, tapering to a
nice lull with lifting ceilings and much decreased wind. Temps remained cold in the upper teens at 12k.
Total storm accumulation sits at 13″ with 1.5″. Total accumulation during the day was 1″ rimed snow with .2″
water.
Snowpack: Pasted wind-driven snow largely lacked signs of instability most of the day. Last
runs of the day in MWW produced skier triggered storm slabs 20-45cm deep toward the end of the day, and other
small slopes began to crack off ski tips on UWW terrain (Outer limits, Assassin pockets). Profile dug in
Outer Limits revealed PST20/100(end), and PST30/100(end) down 60cm in early November facets.
Location: Crested Butte Area Date of Observation: 12/13/2019 Name: billy barr
Subject: Gothic Townsite 6am Obs
Aspect:
Elevation: 9400 Weather: Cloudy and mild with snow starting up after dark and going moderate until after midnight, then lighter as wind becomes moderate with strong gusts. Snow board at 5:30 shows 6½” new snow and 0.48″ water as snow pack reaches winters high of 22″. Wind is moderate and gusting from the west with currently light and blowing snowfall. Little temp. movement with the overnight high 26, low 24 and current 24ºF. I will update after 7 a.m. sweep. billy
Location: Brush Creek Area Date of Observation: 12/10/2019 Name: Eric Murrow
Subject: West Brush Creek
Aspect: East, South, South West
Elevation: 9000′ to 11450′ Avalanches: Gothic: 2xSS-R1-D2 large avalanche on “spork” and east face
Baldy: 1xSS-R2-D2 large avalanche on an alpine east face
WSC: 2xSS-R2-D2 SE alpine terrain features
Weather: Clear skies, mild temperatures, and light winds in terrain traveled. No significant loading but occasional drifting at highest terrains near peaks,.
Snowpack: Traveled up onto Teo ridge from West Brush Creek looking at slab structure to the east of Crested Butte. Profile dug in an east-facing meadow at 11,200′ found HS 78cm with cohesive slab resting above old, weak facets at the ground. Test results CTV and ECTP16. This structure produced numerous rumbling collapses in nearby areas. HS on south and southwest facing near and below treeline was around 40cm. Southerly terrain produced collapses as well but not nearly as large as east-facing terrain. Southerlies had a double crust with facets beneath. South-facing slopes below treeline had become moist by the afternoon. Poor looking structure in most terrain traveled. HS at 9900′ in valley bottom below Teocalli was around 5ocm.
Location: Paradise Divide Area Date of Observation: 12/10/2019 Name: Sam Roberts
Subject: Coneys
Aspect: North, North East, East
Elevation: 9600′-10380′ Avalanches:
Saw a small point release slide in Coon Basin on Mount Emmons N aspect R1D1
On the way to Coneys we saw R1.5 D2 on the South side of Mount Baldy around 12000′
Weather: Sunny all day with little to no wind in the valley bottom. The morning started at around -18 degrees C and warmed up to -8 degrees C by the end of the tour. There was abundant westerly winds on the mountain tops with a lot snow transport.
Snowpack: There is more snow out there but its still pretty scary. On the way out to Coneys there was widespread woompfing and cracking on the flats away from the skin track. Once we did the uphill into Cat’s Hat glades we dug a pit on a 29 degree slope facing NE-E at 10380′. We found a solid spot and found 66cm of snow where three layers were present, the new snow (10cm of F hard stellars), a large slab structure (top 20cm F hard rounded grains and the lower 20cm 4F hard rounded grains), and finally that lovely basal facet layer (16cm F hard 2-3mm facets). As we were setting up for an ECT, the column failed on isolation in a very sudden planar Q1 fracture on the basal facet/slab interface that propagated across the entire column (so ECTP 0?). Frightening results, so we stuck to lower angle terrain and ended up getting some pretty nice turns and no one got any core shots.
Location: Kebler Pass Area Date of Observation: 12/10/2019 Name: Evan Ross & Zach Kinler
Subject: Recent Natural Avalanches
Several fresh natural avalanches were observed on 12/10 thanks to the mostly clear sky and good light. Some of these avalanches looked very fresh and may have released during the AM hours of 12/10. Most avalanches in this natural cycle probably failed during the PM hours of 12/9 or the AM hours of 12/10.
Northeast:
4th Bowl on Axtell. A fresh large avalanche that failed at the ground and initiated on the cross-loaded portion of the bowl. The rest of the avalanche was obscured by the terrain in between.
East:
East Bowl in the Anthracites. A small Wind Slab looked to have released above the cliffs, it then fell onto the slope below and triggered a Persistent Slab failing on SH in the upper snowpack, which then collapsed the well-developed facets at the bottom of the snowpack releasing a larger Persistent Slab. All that also remotely triggered a Persistent Slab failing on the ground next to this avalanche. The avalanche debris had 3 to 5mm SH that had grown on them since the avalanche released.
Ruby/Owen Saddle. A large slab avalanche that appeared to have stepped down into old snow. Released in the last 24hr. SS-N-R1-D2-O
Red Coon Bowl. A Small Wind Slab released off the ridge and stepped slightly deeper into the snowpack releasing a small persistent Slab. SS-N-R1-D2-O
South East:
Afley Peak, ATL. A large slab 1-2ft deep and estimated to have broken into old snow. SS-N-R2-D2-O
3rd hand report: Skier triggered avalanche on Tree Chute in the Anthracites on 12/9. No specific information.
4th Bowl on Axtell. A fresh large avalanche that failed at the ground and initiated on the cross-loaded portion of the bowl.
A Small Wind Slab released off the ridge and stepped slightly deeper into the snowpack releasing a small persistent Slab. SS-N-R1-D2-O
Location: Paradise Divide Area Date of Observation: 12/10/2019 Name: Eric Murrow
Subject: Paradise Divide Storm check and Sunnies Aspect: East, South East, South, South West Elevation: 9400′ – 11850′
Weather: Mostly cloudy skies with intermittent snowfall, accumulations during day up to 1 inch. Light to moderate NW winds, some transport observed in alpine terrain.
Avalanches: Visibility was poor most of the day making avi obs difficult. Just one recent D1 slab failed on an east aspect of Baldy right at treeline, crown completely refilled with only debris visible. Maybe crust/facet combo was involved but it really looked more just like a Wind Slab.
Baldy: 1xSS-R1-D1, SE
Snowpack: Storm total at 10,900′, right near Elkton, was around 24cm with 1.1″SWE. Traveled on mostly southerly facing slopes investigating the development and spread of the Persistent Slab avalanche problem. HS across this terrain was around 50cm to 70cm. Below treeline south and southeast aspects are not of much concern, two crusts were present but the lowest was on the ground and the upper one was buried 12/5 with little faceting beneath at this point (just a thin soft slab resting above from latest round of snow). Near treeline, the lowest crust was 6 to 8 inches above the ground with 1.5-2mm facets beneath. But very little snow volume above, no real slab except maybe for the most drifted locations at upper elevations. Near and above treeline locations do have a weak crust/facet structure near ground and could develop a Persistent Slab problem once a slab forms above. See photos for view of BTL and NTL SE structure.
Location: Paradise Divide Area Date of Observation: 12/09/2019 Name: Evan Ross
Subject: Great skiing on SW Aspect: South, South West, West Elevation: 9,700-11,900
Avalanches: Couple little Loose Snow Avalanches about. Most notable recent avalanche is covered in Eric’s observation. At mid to low elevations, along Climax area to Schuylkill, to Purple Palace, I didn’t observe any new or recent avalanches. You can still see old crowns from the 11/30 natural cycle and the Pittsburgh skier triggered avalanche on 12/5.
Weather: Partly Cloudy. Several snow showers adding up to maybe an inch for the day. Light to Moderate west to northwest winds, with moderate snow transport above treeline.
Snowpack: Total new snow accumulations were sitting around 8″. Skiing conditions were great. Steep south facing slopes had a crust just under the new snow, while SW to W facing slopes made for the best turns and didn’t have this same crust. Only one collapse and shooting crack observed on this tour. This occurred when crossing a tight and shaded gully that held old weak snow. Otherwise quiet for obvious signs to instability.