Strong winds blowing generally from the west drifted a few inches of heavy fresh snow at mid and upper elevations, creating stiffer wind slabs in lee slope avalanche starting zones and in and around terrain features in exposed terrain. People could trigger avalanches of wind drifted snow at upper and mid elevations on drifted slopes steeper than 30°.
The 8400' Tony Grove Snotel reports around 5 inches of heavy new snow in the last 48 hours. It's 15°F this morning, and there is 58 inches of total snow at the site, containing 68% of normal SWE. Sustained and strong westerly winds drifted the new snow at upper and mid elevations. Northwest winds are currently blowing around 20 mph at the 9700' CSI Logan Peak weather station.
- It will be sunny in the mountains today, with high temperatures at 8500' around 32°F and winds blowing from the west-northwest around 15 mph.
- It will be mostly clear tonight with low temperatures around 17°F and 11 to 16 mph west northwest winds.
- Tomorrow, we'll see sunny skies, a high temperature around 43°F, and continuing west-northwest winds, blowing around 13 mph. mph.
- Expect fair weather and fairly significant daytime warming for the last half of the week, with high temperatures on Friday climbing well over 50°F. Expect unsettled seasonal weather and a few chances of snow later in the weekend.
No new avalanches were reported in the Logan Zone since the rapid warmup at the end of March, which caused many natural wet loose and wet slab avalanches in the Wellsville and Bear River mountain ranges.
Check out all the recent backcountry observations and many recent avalanche reports from across Utah
HERE.