Our annual party and fundraiser is coming up on December 6 in Logan at the Cache. 19th Annual Utah Avalanche Center Pray for Snow Party and Fundraiser information and 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 the full list of events for the week.
I'm reading 11° F on Logan Peak this morning, and increasing south-southwest wind creating a -12° F wind chill value. Today will be a nice powder day in the backcountry, although dangerous conditions exist on drifted upper elevation slopes. Southwest winds are increasing this morning and expect drifting of the nice powder in exposed terrain. Sensitive drifts or soft wind slabs built up and are getting thicker as snow is drifted onto steep upper elevation slopes plagued by widespread sugary weak snow. In exposed terrain, ridge top winds are certainly strong enough to move snow, and today they continue to build stiffer drifts out of the nice light powder.
Under the fresh snow, early season snow conditions exist across the Logan Zone, with only about a foot-and-a-half to three feet of total snow covering the rocks on upper elevation slopes. There are numerous shallowly buried land mines out there.
Thankfully, it appears that active wintery weather will continue for a bit. The next in a train of winter storms is expected to impact the area on around Thursday night, with warmer temperatures, another foot+ of snow possible, and strong westerly winds... and looks like another one on the tracks for the weekend.
See our updated list of observed avalanches from across Utah
HERE
Yesterday, we couldn't see much at upper elevations due to the clouds, but we easily triggered cracking and collapsing and remote very soft slabs at mid elevations right off the Franklin Basin Road. Nikki found nice feathers of preserved surface hoar under the fresh powder and shallow Thanksgiving snow...