Avy 1 Snodgrass (Frontside) Observation Tour

CB Avalanche Center2020-21 Observations

Date of Observation: 02/06/2021
Name: David Bumgarner

 

Zone: Southeast Mountains
Location: Front Side of Snodgrass
Aspect: North East, East
Elevation: 10,000

 

Avalanches: We saw a D1 slide on an east aspect later in the day. We had toured near it (see photos) earlier in the day, did not see it go at that time but saw the avalanche later in the day. Not sure if we remote triggered the slide or if it happened naturally later in the day. Did see the aspect getting wind loaded later in the day.
Weather: Temp: Mid 20’s
Wind: light in the area we toured (moderate gusts during our tour)
Sky: Partly cloudy
Precip: None
Snowpack: Pit:
Elevation: 10,360
Aspect: East
Slope angle: 26
HS: 106
CT M SC
ECTP Moderate (13/16/19) SC 31cm down on the 1/19 interface (see photo)

Note: I dug a pit with a course in this area 10 days earlier and was not getting propagating results. The new load has added enough load to stress this layer.
We had multiple collapses throughout our tour.

 

Photos:

Lawd help us all – Mt. Axtell changes color from white to brown overnight

CBAC2020-21 Observations

Date of Observation: 02/06/2021
Name: Zach Guy

Zone: Northwest Mountains
Location: Mt. Axtell
Aspect: North, North East, East, South East, South
Elevation: Near to above treeline

Avalanches: Extensive persistent slab activity across the upper bowls of Mt. Axtell. Crowns averaged 4 feet deep breaking on weak layers near the ground. Some of the more impressive propagation across multiple start zones or whole bowls that I’ve seen up there. Debris piles from the two largest slides snapped lots of trees and reached well into valley runouts, D3.5 in size. Bedsurfaces had a few inches of snow on them; the slides ran last night sometime, on N, E, and S aspects. We didn’t observe any more natural activity on Axtell or surrounding terrain today. See photos for highlights.
Had good views of the W/SW side of Whetstone and no activity there. Decent views of the north side of Carbon and saw one D2.
Weather: Cool temps, mostly cloudy. Moderate winds with a few strong gusts in exposed terrain. Moderate drifting continued above treeline, light drifting near treeline.
Snowpack: About 6″ to 8″ of new snow near the bottom of the skin track. Riding out to Splains Gulch on sleds felt more like 15″ to 18″. We mostly traveled in dense trees, windswept ridgelines, or low angle south-facing terrain and only experienced one large collapse. We tried stomping near a few N/BTL start zones that didn’t run last night without results.

 

Photos:

Avalanche burial and Ruby carnage

CBAC2020-21 Observations

Date of Observation: 02/06/2021
Name: Irwin Guides

 

Zone: Northwest Mountains
Location: Irwin Tenure

Avalanches: Patroller capture and full burial on Sunny Shoulder Right (SW@ 11.6k near TL) during AM ski checks. Companion rescue, no injuries. The SS-ASu-R2/D2-O 75cm x 15m x 100m ran on a crust, but not the most recent crust; stepped down lower in the track; and fetched up in the compressions zone producing a debris field ~75m wide and up to 3m deep in spots. The slope was not open, but was being prepared for opening. It received ~30 lbs of explosives (6 shots) yesterday including a 17lb air blast.

Also, Ruby ran wall to wall, maybe D3+, probably last night during peak PI or wind. You probably heard.
Weather:
Snowpack: HST 17″ with .9″ of water. 13″ of that came overnight last night. Despite strong alpine winds, transport and Wind Slab were not significant factors near and below treeline in areas travelled. Excellent powder skiing. Explosive testing produced no results. Ski testing also produced no notable results, with the following notable exception.

 

Photos:

Slide near Coneys

CB Avalanche Center2020-21 Observations

Date of Observation: 02/06/2021

 

Zone: Southeast Mountains
Location: Washington Gulch
Aspect: North East
Elevation:

 

Avalanches: Fresh slab avalanche just north of Coneys. Released from convex rollover and ran into gully
Weather: Cloudy, windy and temperature around 20 f.
Snowpack:

 

Photos:

Coon Basin…again

CBAC2020-21 Observations

Date of Observation: 02/06/2021
Name: Zach Kinler
Zone: Southeast Mountains
Location: Coon Basin

Avalanches: A third large avalanche released in Coon Basin after a day of continued wind loading. Cleared out what was left above the old crown while breaking at the ground and taking the entire season’s snowpack with it.

 

 

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Slate River Carnage

CB Avalanche Center2020-21 Observations

Date of Observation: 02/06/2021
Name: Emma Lohr

 

Zone: Northwest Mountains
Location: Slate River Road
Aspect: North, North East, East, South East
Elevation: 10,500

 

Avalanches: A multitude of very large avalanches from Climax back into Poverty Gulch. Some with start zones in the high alpine, and some running from mid-slope.
Weather: Short-lived cloud lifting provided good viewing of the full effect of last night’s winds. Snowing on and off throughout the day. Seemed to be more wind transport than accumulation.
Snowpack: Kept it low angle, with some cracking observed on more continuous slopes. Got a few collapses on an already broken skin track, as well.

 

Photos:

The Lion Roared

CB Avalanche Center2020-21 Observations

Date of Observation: 02/06/2021

 

Zone: Northwest Mountains
Location: Slate
Aspect: North, North East
Elevation: Treeline to below treeline

 

Avalanches: Too many to count. From Climax Chutes, all along Schuykill Ridge around the corner to north facing aspects above Daisy Creek. Climax release snapped a tree 2 feet in diameter by the River Flats bathroom and left powder cloud debris on the Slate road (light snow, pine needles and some branches). Releases from the high basin above the town of Pittsburgh from numerous aspects left a considerable amount of debris on a large bench area adjacent to the top of the “rollers.” I’ve included just a few examples of the carnage.
Weather: Nice, warming, light snow off and on
Snowpack: 8 inches new overnight and plenty of evidence of wind but not in protected areas. No sign of instability in a low angle slope that has seen plenty of traffic all season long.

 

Photos:

SE to NW transition zone goes off

CB Avalanche Center2020-21 Observations

Date of Observation: 02/06/2021
Name: Zach Kinler
Zone: SE/NW mountains

Avalanches: Many large and widely propagating avalanches were observed during a brief clearing that allowed views of Mt. Emmons, Gothic, Belleview, Schuylkill and Redwell. Leeward aspects in this “transition zone” from our SE mountains to our NW mountains finally tipped with the most recent round of snow and wind. A few of these avalanches propagated entire paths as well as connecting multiple paths at a time. Impressive slides!
Weather: Blustery NW flow, 5″ HST in town. Snow and wind gave way to some clear skies around and just west of town allowing for views into the nearby alpine.

Photos:

 

Two broad avalanches on Mt. Emmons

CB Avalanche Center2020-21 Observations

Date of Observation: 02/06/2021
Name: Ben Pritchett
Zone: Northwest Mountains
Location: Red Lady Bowl and Coon Basin
Aspect: South East
Elevation: ~12,000′

Avalanches: Two SS-N-R3/D2.5-O avalanches

1x SS-N-R3/D2-O, East below treeline Mt Emmons(Red Lady Glades, repeater in the fishbowl)