Observations

12/17/21

Snodgrass Obs

Date of Observation: 12/17/2021
Name: Alex Tiberio

Zone: Southeast Mountains
Route Description: NE run on snodgrass

Observed avalanche activity: Yes
Avalanches: Debris from last major cycle mostly in areas with dense tree cover
Weather: Mostly clear skies with some snow flurries
Snowpack: Touchy on NE aspects. Dug a pit at the top of 3rd Bowl ECTP23 @ 10cm PSTend 25/100 @ 10cm Skied lower angled terrain near the saddle large whumping collapses while skiing

5114

Read Full Observation
12/17/21

Large Collapse at Coneys

Date of Observation: 12/17/2021
Name: Ben Ammon

Zone: Southeast Mountains
Route Description: 3 laps at Coneys

Observed avalanche activity: No
Avalanches:
Weather:
Snowpack: Large collapse and cracks shooting 50-75 feet in the start zone of 1st Bowl proper (skiers left of the slide on 12/10). It was fairly stubborn, once it collapsed it fractured most of the start zone but didn’t slide.

Photos:

5113

Read Full Observation
12/17/21

Collapses on the flats and another preserved surface hoar layer

Date of Observation: 12/17/2021
Name: Zach Guy

Zone: Northwest Mountains
Route Description: Traveled on NE to SE aspects near and below treeline, lower Slate.

Observed avalanche activity: Yes
Avalanches: Nothing recent. Documented more activity from last cycle.
Weather: Very light snowfall at times. Mostly cloudy skies, light winds, no transport observed.
Snowpack: We found about 6″ to 10″ of recent snow over a preserved surface hoar layer that somehow survived the wind event and was buried on 12/15. I found this layer consistently in hand pits up to about 10,000 ft in sparsely gladed, wind sheltered terrain on northerly aspects. I didn’t see it near ridgeline start zones. Not enough snow on this surface hoar layer for slab concerns at the moment..
We experienced a handful of collapses on basal facets near valley bottom on low angle terrain, some were localized, some radiated up to 100 ft. Many occurred after the second or third skier in the skin track had crossed. Stability tests near and below treeline on shady aspects produced hard, propagating results on the 12/6 facets. Almost all of the steep terrain that we passed by today had slid naturally during the previous cycle. Those slopes did not show signs of instability.
There were small, localized drifts from the 12/15 wind event behind tree fences and near ridges. Ski cuts and cornice drops didn’t produce any signs of instability with these wind slabs.

Photos:

5112

Read Full Observation
12/17/21

Red Coon/Ponytail Glades

Date of Observation: 12/17/2021
Name: Travis Colbert

Zone: Southeast Mountains
Route Description: Up the gentle ridge across the gully from the main Red Lady skin track toward Coon Basin. Stopped just shy of Coon ridge (around 11,300 ft) and made some mellow turns in the upper glades.

Observed avalanche activity: No
Weather: Mostly sunny at 11AM becoming mostly cloudy by early afternoon. Very light SW breeze with intermittent snow flurries, but no accumulation.
Snowpack: Total depth depended on elevation and aspect, but around 60-70cm in the upper glades with 3-5cm new snow on a 5cm sun crust. The crust was more pronounced on southerly aspects and became less noticeable with the slightest tilt to the east. No signs of instability on 30-32 degree slopes.

5108

Read Full Observation
12/16/21

Slate River

Date of Observation: 12/16/2021
Name: Evan Ross & Alex Banas

Zone: Northwest Mountains
Route Description: Slate River. NE, 9,000ft to 11,400ft

Observed avalanche activity: Yes
Avalanches: Nothing fresh since last weeks avalanche cycle. Of particular note, during the 12/10 avalanche cycle an avalanche had propagated from Run Away Ski, through the Lap Track Track Trees, and through most of Yogies. In my 14 or so years in this area I’ve only seen an avalanche go wall to wall across the lap track trees a few times. Cool or not cool?
Weather: Clear sky, becoming partly cloudy. Moderate wind gusts at ridge line transporting snow.
Snowpack: The Slate River Valley had plenty of wind-affected snow, but as soon as we started climbing into the avalanche paths out of the valley the snow surface was all lovely and unaffected by the wind event. Snow surfaces were soft even at ridgeline elevations. Ski pen around 25 to 30cm.

The snowpack in this area was greatly affected by the avalanche activity between 12/9 and 12/10. There wasn’t a lot of undisturbed snow out there. In those undisturbed areas, the persistent slab avalanche problem felt stubborn. We were able to get a few collapses, often with some extra effort.

On the slopes that had avalanche a week ago, I was eager to see if they were developing a new avalanche problem. Below treeline, I didn’t find anything concerning. Near treeline, there were some areas that did pose a concern due to the additional wind-loading.

Below treeline, I didn’t find anywhere that enough snow has accumulated on those old bed surfaces to create a new slab on the remaining facets. The average new snow depths on top of those old bed surfaces ranged from 30cm to 90cm. From a distance, it’s difficult to identify the slopes that avalanched on 12/9, while the slope that avalanche on 12/10 remained obvious.

Near treeline, the slopes that avalanched on 12/10, or generally later in the storm, didn’t pose much concern for a new avalanche problem on this tour. The slopes that avalanched early in the storm, around 12/9, were harder to identity that they had previously avalanched. Those slopes had seen enough wind-loading over the last week to start creating new slabs right near ridgeline. In the end, we didn’t avoid wind-loaded terrain, be we did make assessments and encountered heightened avalanche concerns in those areas.

Photos:

5106

Read Full Observation
12/16/21

Morning obs from Mt. CB

Date of Observation: 12/16/2021
Name: Zach Guy

Zone: Northwest Mountains
Route Description: Views of Scarp Ridge, some of the Ruby Range, Axtell, and Gothic

Observed avalanche activity: Yes
Avalanches: Not much interesting to report. Looks like a pair of slabs on a leeward aspect off of Scarp Ridge.
Weather: Cold and clear, no wind transport.
Snowpack: We were wondering whether the extreme alpine wind speeds were actively loading the alpine or just blowing into space. From my vantage, northeasterly aspects got fatter in the past 24 hours. Some terrain features on other aspects definitely got stripped.

Photos:

5105

Read Full Observation
12/15/21

Blown

Date of Observation: 12/15/2021
Name: Evan Ross

Zone: Southeast Mountains
Route Description: Gunsight Pass. Northerly facing slopes between 9,000ft and 10,400.

Observed avalanche activity: No
Weather: Felt like I was hanging out at an airport or something with jet engines running all day. The wind was generally light where I spent most of my day, but as soon as you get out of any cover it was full-on, strong down-valley winds. Lots of snow transport and wind erosion.
Snowpack: Around 10,000ft the HS averaged 70cm in the flats. Primary traveled on northerly facing slopes where it was easy to identify the layer of weak facets on the ground. Unforutnily they are just an arms reach way, or the layer is easy to identify with a ski pole. The mid-pack slab was around 4f hard over F hard facets The recent storm had deposited 3 to 4″ of new snow and the ski pen averaged around 25cm. In several places, there was small surface hoar just under the new snow, that somehow survived the early wind.

The persistent slab avalanche problem felt stubborn to trigger and lacked obvious signs of instability, without some extra effort. Usually, an extra couple of hard jumps could initiate a collapse where the snowpack had been undisturbed. The few bigger and steeper slopes I got close too, turned out to have already avalanched during last week’s cycle and had not yet accumulated enough new snow to become a problem again. From a distance, I wasn’t able to identify which slopes had or hadn’t previously avalanched.

Photos:

5104

Read Full Observation
12/15/21

Protected

Date of Observation: 12/15/2021
Name: Than Acuff

Zone: Northwest Mountains
Route Description: BTL, NE aspect

Observed avalanche activity: No
Avalanches: Only old ones
Weather: Low 20’s and snowy some periods of heavy snow. Winds pretty subdued aside from the occasional 15 mph gust which started from the SW on our way out but shifted to NW. Could hear it honking up high.
Snowpack: New snow overnight about 5″, 3″ fell while we were out there. Light and awesome. There was a crust on easterly aspects out in the open below the new snow.

Photos:

5103

Read Full Observation
12/15/21

Sensitive wind slabs forming

Date of Observation: 12/15/2021
Name: Zach Guy

Zone: Southeast Mountains
Route Description: CB Nordic Hill

Observed avalanche activity: Yes
Avalanches: Ski cut a small wind slab, 10″ thick, on a small, windloaded slope below treeline.
Weather: Winds actively blowing a few inches of new snow.

Photos:

5102

Read Full Observation
12/15/21

Gothic weather update

Date of Observation: 12/15/2021
Name: billy barr

Zone: Southeast Mountains
Route Description: Gothic townsite

Weather: A lot of noise but little substance. The wind gradually built overnight to become a full on blizzard around 5 a.m. But by 7 the wind has let up and the snow has, for now, stopped. There was just 1″ wind blown and warm snow with 0.10″ of water. A good bit of wind transport but not a lot of new snow to move. Currently overcast with light SW wind and light snow seems to just be starting. Overnight high ws 30F after yesterday’s high of 38F. The current and the low is 18F with 18″ of snow on the ground as it continues to settle.

5100

Read Full Observation
The blog.