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Good morning, this is Drew
Hardesty with the
Don’t
miss the Banff Mountain Film Festival at the U of U’s Kingsbury Hall on March
12 and 13, at
Current Conditions:
Under mostly cloudy skies,
temperatures remained warm in the mountains, rarely dropping below 20
degrees. By around
Avalanche Conditions:
A
hard slab avalanche was triggered by a snowmachiner
in the
In
the central Wasatch, as Ethan Greene puts it, the avalanche conditions can best
be described as pockety in nature. The instabilities are far from widespread,
but it’s difficult to define a legitimate pattern. Not only are separate slopes quite
individual, areas along the same slope are as well – on a traverse, you can go
from an area of relative strength to a weak spot over a matter of feet. While it does look like most of the recent
activity has been on steep, upper elevation north facing slopes along the upper
Cottonwood Ridgeline, I feel certain that other booby-traps exist with similar
terrain characteristics elsewhere along the range. The trick will be to gauge
each area individually, keep your slope angles down, and follow safe travel
protocol. One of our observers went to
investigate the slide that was triggered near
Once
the flood gates open, we may be in for some interesting activity. We
have some pretty weak surface snow on the shady aspects, patched together with
a variety of hard wind and sun crusts. The few inches for tonight may make things
tricky for tomorrow, but the Thursday night storm will likely make for a good
cycle, with a high likelihood of any activity stepping down to weak layering in
the mid-pack.
Bottom Line:
The danger of human triggered avalanches remains MODERATE on mid
and upper elevation northwest through east facing slopes steeper than about 35
degrees. Human triggered avalanches are
possible. It will still be possible for
any avalanche to step down into deeper, faceted snow.
(
These
areas have had a thin snowpack most of the winter, and the sugary weak snow is
more common than in the Cottonwood Canyons.
The danger of human triggered avalanches is more widespread in the
(
Same as above.
Mountain Weather:
Today we’ll see mostly cloudy
skies and some light showers during the day.
Ridgetop winds will be out of the west to
southwest in the 30’s and possibly into the 40’s by late afternoon. 8000’ highs will be in the mid to upper 30’s
with 10,000’ temperatures in the mid-twenties.
Tonight’s storm will be on a strong southwest flow, producing 4-7” at
favored locations, with light snow again tomorrow. At this time, Thursday night’s storm is looking
pretty good.
General Information:
The
Wasatch Powderbird Guides will probably not be flying today, but if they do get
out, will be in the Silver, Day’s,
To
report backcountry snow and avalanche conditions, especially if you observe or
trigger an avalanche, you can leave a message at (801) 524-5304 or
1-800-662-4140. Or you can e-mail an
observation to uacobs@avalanche .org, or you can fax
an observation to 801-524-6301.
For
more detailed mountain weather and avalanche information, your can call
801-364-1591, which we’ll try to have updated by around
The
information in this advisory is from the U.S. Forest Service, which is solely
responsible for its content. This
advisory describes general avalanche conditions and local variations always
occur.
Tom
Kimbrough will update this advisory by
Thanks for calling!
________________________________________________________________________
For
more detailed weather information go to our Mountain Weather Advisory
National
Weather Service - Salt Lake City - Snow.
For an explanation of
avalanche danger ratings: