Thanks for showing up Tuesday night and supporting the UAC. It was great to see everybody at the Cache! You made our annual Pray for Snow party/fundraiser a big success.
Join the Utah Avalanche Center and the Division of Outdoor Recreation to celebrate the Fourth Annual Avalanche Awareness week, from December 4 - December 11. Click
HERE to view the full list of events for the week.
Join us Saturday, December 10th at Beaver Mountain for FREE UAC and USU Beacon Clinic. Find more info
HERE.
Elevated avalanche conditions exist at all elevations in the backcountry. Last week's heavy snow and drifting overloaded many slopes plagued by buried weak layers and poor snow structure. Dangerous human-triggered avalanches remain possible for people to trigger, especially on previously drifted upper and mid-elevation slopes. No new avalanches were reported since the weekend, but observers continue to report audible collapses or "wumpfs" from across the zone. Collapsing indicates unstable snow and real potential for dangerous slab avalanches failing on a buried persistent weak layer. Tuesday in Providence Canyon we triggered a couple wumpfs, but we also noted mixed test results and apparently improving overall stability. As more snow overloads slopes with buried persistent weak layers the danger will rise significantly. Avalanche forecaster Nikki Champion explains;
Today will start cloudy, becoming mostly sunny in the mountains with high temperatures at 8500' around 19° F and 13 to 15 mph west winds. Snow is expected tomorrow, with 3 to 5 inches of accumulation possible. Avalanche conditions will surely worsen this weekend, as a prolonged period of snowy weather is expected Saturday night through early next week, with potential for substantial accumulations in the Bear River Range.
No new avalanches were reported in the backcountry since a pretty active weekend when several remotely triggered and some large natural avalanches were reported.
Several people ventured into the backcountry terrain on the Beaver Backside on Wednesday and some reported collapsing, but no avalanches were reported from the area.
Remember, when you leave the ski area, you are entering the backcountry and you could trigger dangerous avalanches.
***See our updated list of observed avalanches from across Utah
HERE