We are very sad to report that on 2-20-2021, a 48-year-old Preston man was killed in an avalanche on the east side of Sherman Peak west of Georgetown Idaho. Our preliminary accident report is
HERE.
Looks like about 17 inches of new snow, with 1.5" SWE in the last 24 hours at the 8400' Tony Grove Snotel. It's 11°F, and there is 91 inches of total snow and 84% of normal SWE. Winds from the west are blowing 25 to 30 mph at the CSI Logan Peak weather station. There has been a good deal of drifting of the new snow, especially at upper elevations from mostly westerly winds during the storm yesterday and overnight. Winds during periods of heavy snowfall can cause significant loading across large lee slope deposition areas.
We're expecting snow showers to continue this morning and taper off this afternoon, with 3 to 7 inches of additional snow likely to accumulate on upper elevation slopes. Temperatures at 8500' will top out at around 14°F, and 15 to 20 mph west winds will blow the light powder around and create wind chill values as low as -15°F. Expect a cold night, with thinning cloud cover and wind chill values down around -17°F. Mostly sunny and cold weather is expected tomorrow, with fair weather and warming expected for the beginning of the work week.
On Saturday 2-20-2021 a party of riders remotely triggered a very large avalanche near Gibson Lakes in Franklin Basin, a few miles north of the Idaho state line. The large group of riders were down in the flats, and well out from under any steep terrain when they heard a very loud "sonic boom" audible collapse, and the whole hill came down... clouds obscured the crown, but the debris field was quite broad.
A significant natural cycle occurred across the Logan Zone early last week, with many huge avalanches observed. Very large natural avalanches failing on a buried sugary persistent weak layer and running well out into lower elevation runout zones were widespread and occurred on slopes facing almost every direction.
Here's a picture from Thursday of significant recent natural activity on easterly facing slopes in upper Mill Hollow, as seen from Logan Peak. (T.Wolford)