Another hot one

CBAC2020-21 Observations

Date of Observation: 03/07/2021
Name: Zach Guy

 

Zone: Northwest Mountains
Location: Ruby Range: Upper OBJ Basin
Aspect: North East, East, South East
Elevation: 10,500 – 12,800′

 

Avalanches: Widespread wet avalanches from the past few days on E, S, and W aspects; mostly D1 to D1.5 in size a couple D2s. Most of these were either wet loose involving the recent snow or thin soft slabs (6 to 8″ thick) triggered as the recent snow got moist or wet. One was a large wet slab that failed at the ground several feet thick on a south aspect NTL of Schuylkill Ridge. We only saw one wet loose run today (hard to keep track though), but it was easy to trigger small wet sluffs on test slopes.
There were several dry storm slabs that ran last Thursday on northerly aspects.
There was also some impressive persistent slab activity from February that we haven’t gotten views of yet, including several D2.5’s to the ground on south/southwesterly aspects of Schuylkill Ridge, and debris piles pushing D3.5 or larger off of the NE and SE sides of Afley, and perhaps the NE side of Purple.
Weather: Cancun 2021. Warm, sunny, light winds. Thin clouds midday seemed to slightly diminished solar warming,
Snowpack: HS below treeline is 200 cm, HS on a fairly representative alpine feature 250 cm. About 15 cm (6″) of settled storm snow from Thursday. The upper snowpack was frozen solid this morning and starting thawing around 9 to 10 a.m. on easterly aspects. By 11, it was easy to trigger pinwheels and small sluffs involving the recent snow on SE aspects. No signs of instability on shady slopes

 

Photos:

 

Red Lady Bowl

CB Avalanche Center2020-21 Observations

Date of Observation: 03/07/2021
Name: Justin Blair

Zone: Southeast Mountains
Location: Red Lady Bowl
Aspect: South East, South
Elevation: 12,000

Avalanches: As advertised, some wet slides this afternoon in Red Lady Bowl. Unsure of how triggered.

Photos:

EMGT route

CB Avalanche Center2020-21 Observations

Date of Observation: 03/06/2021
Name: Ben Pritchett

 

Zone: Northwest Mountains
Location: Heli flight along the Elk Mountains Grand Traverse route
Aspect:
Elevation:

 

Avalanches: Remarkably few recent avalanches. Only observed one fresh Wet Slab avalanche, and no previously unreported Wet Loose avalanches. We saw numerous large Persistent Slab avalanches seen from the mid-February avalanche cycle, but these were primarily restricted to near treeline, in areas of generally weaker, shallower snow cover. High alpine terrain showed few signs of large to very large avalanches. Those Persistent Slab avalanches seen tended to be wind-loaded features lower on the mountain in areas with weaker snow cover. The big alpine paths in the Star Pass area have not yet gone through a major avalanche cycle this season.
Weather: Hot and calm
Snowpack:

 

Photos:

Dry north, swampy south on Baldy

CBAC2020-21 Observations

Date of Observation: 03/06/2021
Name: Eric Murrow Jared Berman

 

Zone: Northwest Mountains
Location: Baldy south side and northwest side
Aspect: East, South East, South, South West, West, North West
Elevation: 9,400′ – 12,400′

 

Avalanches: Observed a healthy number of small D1 loose avalanches from Friday throughout Ruby Range (most originated from steep rocky areas with some degree of southerly tilt), but did not notice any fresh avalanches today. Returned to town at dark, so was unable to look around the range from the pavement with binos.
Weather: Thin high cloud cover, very warm temperatures, and generally light winds 5 -15mph above treeline.
Snowpack: Ascended southerly-facing terrain that had soft, slightly moist surfaces up through 12k by noon. Descended down through northwesterly terrain near treeline and found surprisingly soft surface conditions. Ascended back up through said NW near treeline terrain and probing revealed HS between 120cm and 220cm. We dug a test profile at a site with HS of 150cm and found around 115cm slab resting over weak Depth Hoar at ground (4finger- hardness) – ECTX and PST 52/110 END. Here there are two layers of concern, basal depth hoar and weak near-surface facets buried by 20cm of recent snow.

Late in the day we traveled over E, SE, S, and SW slopes near treeline and found wet snow conditions. On a SE slope at 11,600′, with HS of 135cm, meltwater has percolated about 75cm down.  A weak facet/crust layer just above ground has yet to see water infiltration. I would anticipate liquid water to reach the ground at this site within the next two days if forecasted temperatures verify Sunday and Monday. One SW feature at 10,800′ had trenchy, wet conditions as we skied over with a dramatic increase in ski pen around 10-12 inches.

 

Coon Basin wet slab

CB Avalanche Center2020-21 Observations

Date of Observation: 03/06/2021
Name: geo bullock

 

Zone: Southeast Mountains
Location: North side of coon Basin
Aspect: South East
Elevation: 11,500

 

Avalanches: I triggered an avalanch 8-18″ deep and 70′ wide, ran 500′ vertical to the bottom of coon basin.I traversed under the cornice intending to take an easier route and quickly went from dense snow to shallow wet snow and rocks (see picture).went for a ride maby 200′.managed to stand up on my skis (see dirt spot) and let it pass. the intention was to ski down the ridge not coon basin. I was too late in the day to be on that pitch. the slope angle at the trigger point was at least 40
Weather: high overcast light breeze 40 degrees
Snowpack: 65cm wet snow

 

Photos:

GMT-Reboot

CB Avalanche Center2020-21 Observations

Date of Observation: 03/06/2021
Name: Andrew Breibart

 

Zone: Northwest Mountains
Location: GMT Reduction (East River-Paradise Divide-Washington Gulch)
Aspect:
Elevation: BTL, NTL

 

Avalanches: didn’t take pictures of the wet loose avalanches on south aspects of Baldy and east aspects of Gothic.

1. Mt Belleview-NTL on W/SW aspect: slab avalanche (D1 to D2) CBAC NOTE – reported 2/22 ob here
2. Mt. Baldy-NTL on SW aspect wet slab
3. Coneys-BTL on E/NE aspect: slab (D0.5-D1) CBAC NOTE – reported 3/2 ob here
Weather: Temperatures remained lower than yesterday’s sauna due to thin cloud cloud cover. Calm.
Snowpack: snow is transitioning rapidly on southern aspects BTL as a melt freeze crust develops.

 

Photos:

Coon Basin skier-triggered Wet slab

CBAC2020-21 Observations

Date of Observation: 03/06/2021
Name: Zach Kinler
Zone: Southeast Mountains
Location: Coon Basin
Aspect: South East
Elevation: NTL

 

Avalanches: Wet slab avalanche that ran sometime before 1:30 pm. A later report from the party involved revealed this was a skier-triggered avalanche. An observation will be submitted by the reporting party.

 

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Cement Creek

CB Avalanche Center2020-21 Observations

Date of Observation: 03/05/2021
Name: Ben Pritchett and Bo Torey

 

Zone: Southeast Mountains
Location: Upper Cement Creek and Upper Taylor River
Aspect:
Elevation: up to 9,000-12,400′

 

Avalanches: 3 small wet loose avalanches ran above treeline on steep rocky south-facing slopes in the Upper Taylor River headwaters. Surprisingly no other wet loose avalanches observed. Numerous roller balls seen, but none that gouged or spread into a pushy wet avalanche.
Weather: Ridgeline Wind Speed: Calm
Temperature: 43 F
Sky Cover: Clear
Depth of Total Snow: 150 cm
Weather Description: Warm, calm day. No blowing snow observed.
Snowpack: The upper snowpack is gaining strength and making it more difficult to influence weak snow below. Average snowpack in the upper Cement Creek and upper Taylor River headwaters area ranged from 130-160cm. Multiple ECT’s failed to produce propagating results in the normal loading steps. Removing part of the slab, and slamming on the remaining thin slab did produce a propagating result in one profile. East to south to west-facing slopes with a lot of sun have grown crusty, with rills developing in the snow surface near and below treeline. We experienced a pair of collapses, with long-running shooting cracks, over 50′ long, in the valley bottom. Alpine surfaces are highly variable, with a few inches of fresh snow obscuring highly textured and dense old wind textures. Near treeline shady surfaces were soft, but dense enough for reliable sled and boot support.

 

Photos:

Kebler Pass corridor

CBAC2020-21 Observations

Date of Observation: 03/05/2021
Name: Eric Murrow

 

Zone: Northwest Mountains
Location: Snowmobile journey to Beckwith Pass and up into Evan’s Basin on Mount Emmons.
Aspect: East, South East, South, South West, West
Elevation: 8,900′ – 11,200′

 

Avalanches: Observed loose snow avalanches on sunny slopes near and above treeline, generally coming from warm, rocky terrain features. Up to D1.5 in size. Overall significantly less activity than I expected to find. See photos for examples. Observed one natural run on alpine SE slope at 1:30 pm.
Weather: Clear skies, light winds, and warm temperatures above freezing.
Snowpack: Around 7″ storm snow on top of Kebler Pass and Beckwith Pass.  5″ on lower flanks of Mount Emmons.

I targeted a shaded slope in a shallower snowpack area on the far west end of the forecast area near Horse Ranch Park. I found HS 120cm with dense slab around 75cm thick sitting on old snow from early in season – ECTP 28 x2 result failing in oldest weak snow near ground. 1/19 interface shows clear sign of rounding and no result here. Oldest snow at ground was 3-4mm Depth Hoar – it is starting to round and sinter with around 4finger hardness. Late February weak layer is down 20cm, .5 -1mm facets with ECTN 11 and easy Shovel Tilt Test results.

In the afternoon traveled on southerly-facing slopes checking in on where liquid water was in the snowpack. On several slopes found moist snow from the surface to the ground. Ice columns from percolating meltwater was found nearly all the way to the ground – with around 20cm of moist, 4finger hard snow at the ground without ice columns. Tests produced no result on these slopes even while hammering on the column until my hand hurt. See photo of ice columns.

 

Photos:

So Good While It Lasted

CBAC2020-21 Observations

Date of Observation: 03/05/2021
Name: Evan Ross

Zone: Northwest Mountains
Location: P-Divide
Elevation: 9,000-11,800ft

Avalanches: Wet loose avalanches happened, but no widespread and all on the small size. Some east, some south, some west, they all had a little action.

Weather: Calm winds, warm temps, clear sky, beautiful.

Snowpack: Well, that snow sure was good while it lasted! Lots of now crusty snow surfaces heading into tomorrow, until they warm back up again… The recent snow seemed to just bake in, more than release as wet loose avalanches. Hard saying just how reactive it will be on the next warm-up after today. We slammed a whole lot of terrain features, many in the upper 30 degrees, and didn’t find any signs of instability regarding PSa. Still considering regrouping areas for the low likelihood avalanche problem. If anything, upper elevations looked like the best chance to find a thick snowpack transitioning to a thin snowpack due to previous winds.

We descended a SW aspect between 11,000-10,00ft at 3:30pm with slope angles in the upper 30 degrees. The new snow on that slope felt more baked in and we didn’t see any movement.