Join us for our 16th annual Pray for Snow Party, December 4, at The Cache in downtown Logan.
Come join us for an evening filled with good friends, good food, and good music all to support avalanche forecasting, awareness, and education. Music from The Swinging Lights!!!! Lucky Slice will be serving up gourmet slices once again.
Buy your tickets early to save $5! See you there!
HERE
It's 12°F at the 8400' Tony Grove Lake Snotel this morning, and I'm reading 35 inches of total snow. The site has recorded 2.4" SWE from the Thanksgiving Storm. It's 11°F at the 9700' CSI Logan Peak weather station and southwest winds are blowing about 20 mph. Dangerous avalanche conditions exist in the backcountry, and human triggered avalanches are likely in upper elevation north facing terrain where there are slopes plagued by very weak, sugary or faceted October snow.
It will be mostly sunny today with a slight chance of snow showers. High temperatures at 8500' are expected to climb to around 25°F. 7 to 11 mph southwest winds will create wind chills this morning around -19°F. It'll be mostly cloudy in the mountains tonight, with temperatures rising to around 22°F, a chance of snow showers, and 10 to 14 mph southwest winds. It will be cloudy on Monday, with a good chance for 1 to 3 inches of snow. It'll be around 27°F, and 11-14 mph west-southwest winds are expected.
11/28/19: The new snow was almost too deep to do turns on the "Ridge". Beaver Mountain welcomes non-motorized travel and offers a good option for early season turns. Before the lifts open you should treat it as the backcountry, but most of the terrain is not steep enough for avalanches. Come on up and help pack out all the fresh powder.
Numerous human triggered avalanches were reported in the past couple days in the Central Wasatch Range backcountry above Salt Lake and Park City. No avalanches were reported in the Logan Zone, but I won't be surprised if we see evidence of natural activity from the Thanksgiving Storm with clearing this weekend. Please let us know what you see....
Backcountry skiers remote triggered this avalanche from quite a distance in No Name Bowl west of Park City.