25th Annual Black Diamond Fall Fundraising Party
Thursday, September 13; 6:00-10:00 PM; Black Diamond Parking Lot
25th Annual Black Diamond Fall Fundraising Party
Thursday, September 13; 6:00-10:00 PM; Black Diamond Parking Lot
Advisory: Salt Lake Area Mountains | Issued by Evelyn Lees for Saturday - February 25, 2017 - 6:31am |
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special announcement The CAIC finished their report on the recent snowbike fatality. It's a story worth reading. It was a complex situation, with 3 separate avalanches occurring. A take home is that they had airbags and didn't know they needed beacons, too. A beacon, probe, and shovel are still essential gear, even with an air bag. Backcountry Closures – Little Cottonwood Canyon Backcountry Closure: LCC Limber Pine-Grizzly Gulch until around 8 am. Catch up with Greg’s weekly review here. |
current conditions This winter keeps getting better and better... storm totals of classic Utah powder this week are 3 to 4’ in the Cottonwoods, up to 3’ on the Park City side, 3 ½ feet in the Ogden area mountains and about 2 feet in the Provo area mountains. Cold temperatures and clouds have preserved the deep low-density powder on all aspects with little settlement. Trail breaking has been epic to match – worth 3 desserts after a long day. Hand in hand with the winter snow are winter temperatures…most stations are just below zero this morning, with single digits in the Provo and Ogden area mountains. West to southwest winds at the higher 11,000’ elevations are flirting with 20 to 25 mph averages, while most other stations are averaging 10 mph or less. |
recent activity Yesterday, people were able to trigger long running sluffs in the backcountry. The resorts reported both soft slabs and sluffs from ski cuts and explosives, far and fast running. The one stand out was a natural in the White Pine slide path in Little Cottonwood Canyon hitting the road. It was a post control release, perhaps triggered by a period of heavier snowfall and a slight up tick in wind speeds. Left - Mark White photo sluff Right - Tyler Falk photo, small wind slab
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type | aspect/elevation | characteristics |
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LIKELIHOOD
LIKELY
UNLIKELY
SIZE
LARGE
SMALL
TREND
INCREASING DANGER
SAME
DECREASING DANGER
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description
Wind slabs from the past few days can be triggered – new soft slabs and older wind slabs hidden beneath the new snow. These are mostly at the upper elevations. Today, conditions could change with the blink of an eye if winds increase by 5 to 10 mph. So be ready for rapidly changing conditions, especially at the upper elevations. Keep an eye out for plumes off the peaks and ridges, drifting where you are, or your tracks filling in. If the winds pick up where you are and snow starts to drift, get off steep slopes and avoid the terrain below the blowing snow, as natural avalanches could occur. Head to less wind affected terrain – go to a different aspect or drop to a lower elevation - and continue to have an awesome day of powder. |
type | aspect/elevation | characteristics |
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LIKELIHOOD
LIKELY
UNLIKELY
SIZE
LARGE
SMALL
TREND
INCREASING DANGER
SAME
DECREASING DANGER
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description
People will continue to be able to trigger loose dry sluffs on steep slopes today. Once these sluffs get going, they can go fast and far in continuously steep terrain. Most of the sluffs will be within the storm snow, but on southerly facing slopes and at the lower elevations they could run on the hard ice crusts beneath, giving them that extra distance and bulk. Especially avoid terrain where sluffs can pile up deeply, including creek beds, gullies and tree wells at the lower elevations.
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type | aspect/elevation | characteristics |
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LIKELIHOOD
LIKELY
UNLIKELY
SIZE
LARGE
SMALL
TREND
INCREASING DANGER
SAME
DECREASING DANGER
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description
Cornices are enormous, and continue to build day after day. Avoid travel below these mammoths, and stay well back from the edge on top – they break back much further than expected. Classic cornice |
weather A weak trough will cross the area today, keeping skies mostly cloudy and temperatures cold. Light snow showers could add up to a trace to 2” of snow by evening. 8000’ highs will warm into the mid teens, 10,000’ highs a few degrees above zero. The south to southwest to westerly winds are forecast to remain light at the mid elevations, but could increase slightly at the 11,000’ peaks and ridges, with averages in the 15 to 25 mph range. Stronger winds are expected tonight and tomorrow, with the next storm to arrive Sunday night. |
general announcements
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