Introduction: Good Morning this
is Dave Medara with the
WE ARE STARTING TO FILL UP OUR AIARE LEVEL 1 AND LEVEL
2 CLASSES BEING HELD IN THE LA SALS THIS YEAR.
THE LEVEL 1 IS FEBRUARY 3RD-5TH (FRI-SUN), WHILE
OUR LEVEL 2 IS MARCH 3RD-6TH
(FRI-MON). CALL (435)
636-3363 FOR MORE INFORMATION AND TO SIGN UP.
EACH CLASS IS LIMITED TO 12 STUDENTS.
TUITION GOES DIRECTLY TOWARDS THE FRIENDS OF THE MANTI-LA SAL AVALANCHE
CENTER.
To see past advisories check out the ARCHIVE. To see current conditions go to our WEATHER PAGE. To see photos go to the AVIPHOTOS page.
General Conditions:
The 5” of snow that fell Saturday night
was severely needed and so will be the snow forecast to fall today and tonight.
Yesterday’s sun and warm temperatures will likely have crusted over any
slopes with a SE-SW-W aspect. The shady side slopes E-NE-NW will keep the drier
powder snow longer, but keep in mind that there is very little base on the mountain
right now. The snow cover is still dangerously thin. The cross country and
skate skiing conditions on the
Current Conditions: (click location for latest data)
Geyser
Pass Trailhead (9,600’):
15” at the SNOTEL. 19”
at the GPTH Snowstake, 32 degrees at the
Pre-Laurel Peak
Weather Station (11,705’): Still Struggling with
the weather station. Had contact, lost contact. The drama continues with new
hardware.
Mountain Weather: (At 10,500’)
Today: Areas of snow. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 38. Windy, with a
southwest wind between 25 and 30 mph, with gusts as high as 40 mph. Chance of
precipitation is 30%.
Tonight: Periods of snow, mainly after
Tuesday: Snow likely, mainly before noon. Mostly cloudy, with a high
around 29. Windy, with a west southwest wind 25 to 30 mph decreasing to between
15 and 20 mph. Winds could gust as high as 45 mph. Chance of precipitation is
70%. New snow accumulation of 3 to 5 inches possible.
Avalanche Conditions: (Link to the
International Avalanche Danger Scale here)”
The warm temperatures have settled the
new snow out quite a bit and on the sunny slopes a sun crust will lock things
in greatly reducing the avalanche hazard and messing up and skiing there might
have been in Julie’s or Goldminer’s. The danger zone will remain
upper elevation E-N-NW facing slopes steeper that 35 degrees where high winds
have deposited more snow and the warm temperatures and sun have the least
effect. Expect to find a CONSIDERABLE
avalanche danger on these upper elevation shady side slopes. Expect to find a MODERATE hazard elsewhere
in the range, keeping an eye out for areas of wind drifted snow. I will update
this message on Tuesday morning.