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HERE
The snow in the backcountry is supportable and mostly stable. You'll find fast snow conditions and challenging areas with rock hard or variable and breakable crusts. While the snow is extra crunchy especially at lower elevations due to last week's rain storm, soft recrystallized surface snow can be found in sheltered shady terrain up higher, and sunny slopes are reported to be smooth and "buttery". It didn't rain so much, and the snow isn't so crusty north and east of about Beaver Mountain.
The 8400' Tony Grove Snotel reports 21°F this morning and there is 70 inches of total snow with 130% of normal SWE for the date. Winds out of the northwest are blowing around 20 mph this morning at the CSI Logan Peak weather station. Light snow is falling at the bottom of Beaver Mountain, and we can expect mostly cloudy conditions today, with high temperatures at 8500' around 26°F. It will be partly cloudy and temperatures will drop to around 10°F tonight. A few flakes of snow are likely tomorrow, and a few inches are likely tomorrow night (2 to 4 inches at 8500'). It looks like clearing again and fair weather for the upcoming weekend..
It's been a couple weeks since the last large natural avalanches occurred in the Logan Zone. An observer sent in this picture of a natural deep slab avalanche in the Mount Naomi Wilderness that likely occurred during the warm and very wet storm in the first week of January.
Observers also report some recent loose wet activity in the Cherry Creek Area in the Mount Naomi Wilderness.
Check
HERE for all the latest observations and avalanche activity.