Currently, temperatures range through the teens F and winds are from the west/northwest. At mid elevations winds are averaging around 10 mph, with gusts in the teens and low 20's mph. However, winds remain fairly strong at the upper elevations, averaging in the 20's mph with gusts in the 30s mph at 11,000'.
Storm totals in the Provo mountains since Thursday morning are 8", although higher amounts are likely at upper elevations. Water totals are 0.5" to nearly an inch in areas that received the most snow.
For today, expect mostly-cloudy skies with occasional snow flurries, although additional totals should be at most 1-2". Temperatures will reach the upper teens F. Winds will be northerly, averaging in the teens with gusts in the 20's mph at mid elevations, and averages in the 20's with gusts in the 30's mph at 11,000'.
Although Salt Lake-centric, our first
Week in Review - where we summarize snow and avalanche conditions for the past week - has been published.
We received no reports from Thursday in the Provo mountains. Just to the north in the Salt Lake mountains, it was very active where were six human-triggered avalanches reported from Thursday. What is noticeable of these slides is many were triggered remotely (from a distance) failing in weak faceted snow that is now buried 18-30" deeply, an indication of the fragility of our weak snowpack structure:
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No Name Bowl Park City Ridgeline (10" deep, 30' wide, 450' vertical)
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Dog Lake Chutes in the Brighton backcountry (2' deep, 175' wide, 300' vertical)
The Dog Lake Chutes slide really got the attention of the Salt Lake forecasters due to its size and remote trigger:
In the video below, Mark Staples discusses the avalanche he and UAC colleague forecaster Nikki Champion triggered in Days Fork on a 30° slope.