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The 8400' Tony Grove Snotel reports 3 or 4 inches of new snow from yesterday and overnight. It's a chilly 4°F this morning, and there is 67 inches of total snow at the site. Winds out of the west-northwest are blowing 17 mph at the 9700' CSI Logan Peak weather station, which reports a
wind chill value of -27°F this morning. Light snowfall is visible on the
Beav's Webcams.
A bit more snow will improve backcountry riding on dust-on-crust and shallow powder and do little to change avalanche conditions. Tuesday night's strong easterly winds easily picked up light new snow from earlier in the week, and in some areas, drifts formed on preexisting weak faceted snow. The drifting created heightened avalanche conditions at mid and upper elevations, and two parties unintentionally triggered small avalanches of wind drifted snow on Wednesday. Today's few inches of fresh snow will hide obvious signs of the midweek drifting from east winds, which created wind slabs in unusual places.
A couple different parties reported triggering small soft slab avalanches of wind drifted snow in the Bear River Range Wednesday.
- A few snowflakes are floating in the air this morning in the Bear River Range. Expect cloudy skies and cold temperatures in the mountains again today. 8500' high temperatures will be around 8°F, and light northwest winds will create wind chill values as low as -8°F today.
- It will be partly cloudy tonight, and temperatures will drop to around -6°F, and with light north winds, the wind chill value will be as low as -17°F.
- Expect sunny skies tomorrow with high temperatures around 19°F, light north winds and early morning wind chill values around -19°F.
- Looks like mostly sunny, fair weather, and warming temperatures are in store for the next few days, with the next chance for snow coming around midweek.
Two unintentionally triggered avalanches were reported from Wednesday on north facing slopes above 8000'. 1)-A party of skiers remotely triggered from the ridge above a 10" deep and 150' wide pocket of drifted snow in the Mt. Naomi Wilderness. 2)-A rider was caught and carried a short distance and his sled overturned in a soft wind slab avalanche, "15" to 18" deep and 60' wide" a couple miles north of the ID state line in Franklin Basin.
This avalanche in the Mount Naomi Wilderness was remotely triggered from the ridge above. Remote triggering indicates a high likelyhood that the avalanche failed on faceted snow, now a buried persistent weak layer.
A rider was caught and carried a shot distance and his sled overturned in this small avalanche north of the Idaho State Line in Franklin Basin. Is this the canary in the coal mine?
Check out all the recent backcountry observations and avalanche reports from across Utah
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