We will be giving a free Know Before You Go Avalanche Awareness talk on Tuesday, Dec 6 at 6:00 p.m. at the MARC (111 E 100 N).
Join us for the
1st Annual UAC Moab/LUNA Winter Kickoff Party on Saturday, Dec 10 at the MARC. The event will be from 7-9 PM. Get your
tickets here.
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 a full list of events throughout the state.
Road Conditions: Grand County has not yet begun plowing the road to Geyser Pass Trailhead. The road is hard-packed snow and slick in places. Good tires and all wheel drive are recommended.
Grooming: The Geyser Pass Road above the winter trailhead closes on Dec 15. Grooming will commence after that.
24 Hour Snow 0" 72 Hour Snow 7" Season Total Snow 41" Base Depth at Gold Basin 21"
Winds on Pre Laurel Peak S 20-25 G35 Temp 26F
The story is the wind. Southerly winds have been on the increase since yesterday afternoon averaging close to 30 mph, with gusts as high as 40 mph on ridge tops. Today, look for increasing clouds and wind ahead of a low pressure system moving into the region. Unfortunately for us, we're going to see a lot of huff and puff and not much fluff as the storm track is to the north. We should see some snow flurries by early Friday morning with maybe an inch or two of accumulation. Cloudy and breezy conditions persist through Saturday with the next system moving in on Sun- Mon. This storm doesn't look to be much of a producer for us either. An unsettled pattern remains in place through next week, we'll see if anything shapes up.
Southerly winds are continuing to drift Monday's seven inches of low density snow, forming unstable
slabs on leeward slopes near and above treeline. Alternately, windward surfaces are scoured, crusted, and sculpted. Complicating the picture are older
wind slabs that formed earlier this week, all of which are sitting on top of a foundation of weak, sugary, faceted snow. The bottom line is that the snowpack isn't shaping up all that well and we will soon be facing a
persistent weak layer problem. It's also still low tide out there with lots of rocks, stumps, and logs lurking about. It's just not quite game on yet, we need another foot or so of snow.
If you are getting up into the mountains please
submit an observation and let us know what you are seeing!
Get current and past 24-hour readings from these real-time weather links:
No recent avalanches have been reported from the backcountry.