In partnership with: Utah Division of State
Parks and Recreation, The Friends of the Utah Avalanche Center, Utah Department
of Emergency Services and Homeland Security and
AVALANCHE ADVISORY
Monday, December 05, 2005 7:30am
Good morning,
this is Drew Hardesty with the
Up coming avalanche awareness talks by the UAC
staff include:
Dec 6 7 pm Full Throttle Power Sports 240 N Frontage Rd, Centerville
Dec 6 7 pm Black Diamond Retail 2092 E 3900 S, SLC
Dec 7 7 pm Lady of the Snows, Alta
Dec 13 7 pm REI, 3285 E, 3300 S,
SLC
Dec 14 6:60 pm Mnt High Motorsports, 8262 S Redwood Rd, West
Jordan
Dec 14 7 pm South Valley Unitarian,
6876 S Highland Dr.
Wasatch Touring will sponsor the 1st annual
Avalanche Roundtable discussion tonight at 7:30 pm in Memory Grove at the
Memorial House. Three avalanche survivors will tell their stories,
including mountaineer Jeff Lowe, and locals Rick Hoffman and Steve Walcher. It is free and open to the public.
Current Conditions:
After yesterday’s raging conditions, it seems eerily clear, calm, and
quiet. Storm totals are 2-3’ across the
range, but yesterday’s strong winds whipped Saturday’s dreamy turning
conditions in the open bowls into an unpredictable inverted mess. Averaging 40-50mph and gusting into the 70’s,
the northwesterly winds have calmed to a more reasonable 20-30mph along the
more exposed ridges. Temperatures are in the low single digits and below
zero along the high peaks and where cold air has pooled in the high basins and
alpine drainages. Riding conditions will be best on a wide platform and in the
mid-elevation trees.
Avalanche Conditions:
The strong winds
and blizzard conditions made for stiff slabs and unusual loading patterns, resulting
in spotty avalanches at the ski areas and along the
Prudently, most backcountry travelers yesterday headed
to their favorite protected tree shots, but I wonder if, with today’s better
visibility and weather whether folks will start to jump into the bigger more
exposed lines today. It’ll be
tricky. Hard wind slabs over a
persistent weak layer are often the backcountry rider’s nemesis. They can be stubborn on slope cuts and
cornice drops, may allow the person to get a few turns out onto the slab, or
may allow for a few runs before pulling out on the third lap. Steep rollovers and shallow rocky areas often
fit the bill as trigger points, but they’re tricky animals any way you cut
it. Avalanches may still be triggered
from a distance and any slide triggered on mid and upper elevation northwest
through north through east slopes may step down into old snow with similar
dimensions as yesterday’s slides. There
is still pleasant and safe riding in the mid-elevation trees on slopes less
than 35 degrees that are not attached to steeper slopes above.
Bottom Line:
The avalanche
danger remains CONSIDERABLE with
human triggered avalanches probable on steep drifted slopes, with the real
potential for them to step down into older faceted snow. While naturals are not expected, some
artificially triggered releases will likely be large and dangerous.
Mountain Weather:
We’ll have partly
to mostly cloudy skies as a system brushes by to the northeast. 8000’ highs will be in the high teens with
10,000’ temps around 10 degrees. The
northwest winds will blow 15-20mph over the high ridges. An unsettled northwest flow drives the
weather for the first part of the week with a weak storm to move through later
Tuesday. Seasonal Weather History Charts. (NOTE:
USE INTERNET EXPLORER FOR BEST VIEWING)
Please
report any backcountry snow and avalanche conditions you observe. We appreciate all information. You can call (801) 524-5304 or
1-800-662-4140, or email to uac@avalanche.org
or fax 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.
To
have this advisory automatically e-mailed to you each day, click HERE. (You must re-sign up this season even if you
were on the list last season.)
The annual report for 2004-05 is now on the web.
(Click HERE,
8mb)
Brett
will update this advisory Tuesday morning.
Thanks for calling.