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Avalanche advisory
Thursday, February 05, 2004, 7:30 am
Good
morning, this is Evelyn Lees with the
The Banff Film Festival, a benefit for the Friends
of the
The Friends of the
Current
Conditions:
The moist northwest flow that is lingering
over northern
Avalanche Conditions:
The only avalanche activity reported from Tuesday’s few field observations were loose snow sluffs on steep slopes. Most people felt the wind slabs from the strong southerly winds have settled out and are no longer sensitive.
Today, the big change is the increased wind speeds. The 15 to 20 mph speeds along the highest ridges are just perfect to start blowing and drifting the light density snow. In the Cottonwoods, which have received the most snow, I would expect widespread sensitive wind drifts in wind affected terrain, with the deepest drifts along the upper ridgelines of Little Cottonwood. Cornices could be large and sensitive, and break back further than expected. Out of the wind affected terrain, expect moderate to large loose snow sluffs on steep slopes.
Much of the terrain in the
There is still a slight chance of triggering one of the more deeply buried weak layers, with a large trigger such as several people on a slope at the same time or the weight from a shallower new snow slide.
Bottom
Line for the Wasatch Range, including the
The avalanche danger is Considerable on steep, upper elevation, wind drifted slopes in Big and Little Cottonwood. In the areas that have received less snow and wind, the avalanche danger is moderate on slopes steeper than about 35 degrees, for both loose sluffs and shallow soft slabs. On slopes less steep than about 35 degrees, the danger is low.
Bottom
Line for the
In the
Mountain Weather:
The
upper level low is now over southeastern
For specific digital forecasts for the
General Information:
The
Wasatch Powderbird Guides did not fly yesterday, and if they can fly today will
be in Mineral,
If you are getting into the backcountry, please give us a call and let us know what you’re seeing, especially if you trigger an avalanche. You can leave a message at 524-5304 or 1-800-662-4140. Or you can e-mail an observation to uac@avalanche .org, or you can fax an observation to 801-524-6301.
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.
Andrew McLean will update this advisory Friday morning.
Thanks for calling.
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