Forecast for the Abajos Area Mountains

Eric Trenbeath
Issued by Eric Trenbeath on
Tuesday morning, December 25, 2018
Look for a rising avalanche danger over the next 24 hours. Today there will be an isolated, or MODERATE avalanche danger on steep slopes that have recent deposits of wind drifted snow, primarily in upper elevation terrain that faces NW-N-E. There also remains an isolated, MODERATE danger for triggering a dangerous avalanche 1'-3' deep on steep, rocky, north facing terrain that has an underlying weak and sugary snowpack. Most other terrain has generally LOW danger.
Low
Moderate
Considerable
High
Extreme
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Special Announcements
Check out the new free online avalanche course series developed by the Utah Avalanche Center. This is a great way to refresh your skills or prepare you for a Backcountry 101 or Level 1 class.
Weather and Snow
A winter storm system is on the way and it looks like we may get a nice white package for Christmas! Today look for scattered showers with 1-3" of new snow possible with the best chance for significant snowfall coming tonight into tomorrow with up to a foot possible. SW winds will be blow in the 25-30 mph range along ridge tops, and high temps at 9000' will be near 30 degrees. Merry Christmas!
Snow totals at Buckboard Flat (8924')
Snow totals at Camp Jackson (8858')
Wind, temperature, and humidity on Abajo Peak (11,000')
National Weather Service point forecast.
General Announcements
Your information can save lives. If you see anything we should know about, please help us out by submitting snow and avalanche observations HERE. You can also call me at 801-647-8896, or send me an email: eric@utahavalanchecenter.org.
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This advisory is from the U.S.D.A. Forest Service, which is solely responsible for its content. This advisory describes general avalanche conditions and local variations always occur.