Introduction: Good
Morning! This is Evan Stevens with the
USFS Manti-La Sal Avalanche Center with your avalanche and mountain weather
advisory. Today is Monday, February 9th,
2004 at 8:15am.
Click here for recent photos. Click here for Snowpits. You can always email us observations as well
by clicking here,
or sending a message to estevens@fs.fed.us
or mforgensi@fs.fed.us .
General Conditions:
The artic chill remains in place as current temperatures hover
around 1 at 9,500’ and –7 at 11,700’.
Snow depths are settled to the low 40” range down low and near 70” up in
Gold Basin. Settled powder is the norm
in the sheltered and shady locations, wind hammered in the exposed spots, and
some sun crusts on southerly aspects below 11,000’. Winds have been out of the NE at around 7-12mph.
Mountain Weather:
After today’s highs in the teens, and tonight’s below zero temps,
tomorrow should start a slight warming trend under mostly sunny skies. Winds today should be out of the N at around
10-15mph, and tomorrow out of the NNW at around 5-10mph. The forecast looks a little bleak for any new
snow.
Avalanche Conditions:
Cracking and collapsing have been common place in the backcountry
even still. 1-2’ of February snows are
sitting on top of the old sugary January surface snows and this is where all of
our action is taking place. In lower elevation
areas, the all of the old snow was rotted out completely and now is in the form
of depth hoar. For now this translates
to a period of no new natural avalanches, but a precarious situation for
backcountry travelers if they find the sweet spot of the slopes they happen to
be on. Remember, watch and listen for
clues of collapsing and whoompfing, and keep your slope angles below 35
degrees. With the cold temperatures of
late, don’t expect this persistent weak layer to disappear any time soon. The bottom line is an avalanche danger of MODERATE with pockets of CONSIDERABLE on slopes steeper
than 35 degrees on all aspects at and above treeline, with extra caution needed
for terrain traps and open lower elevation areas.
Remember a CONSIDERABLE danger means
human triggered avalanches are PROBABLE and natural avalanches are
possible, while MODERATE danger means
human triggered avalanches are possible.