Snow Observations List
We skied into Beehive Basin today and found unstable snow. The bottom half of the 1.5' snowpack is weak, sugary facets that collapsed with audible "whumpfs" as we toured up. We dug at 8,700' on a SE aspect (a few hundred meters up valley of Tyler's slope) and the snowpit revealed a poor snow structure and instability. Even though some ranges have more snow, the set up is the same: weak, unstable snow underlying new snow. Avalanches, whumpfs and cracking are warning us to be careful throughout our entire forecast area.
Full Snow Observation Report1 team yesterday (Saturday, not me) climbed Bobo Like and Big Sleep (first 2 pitches of each). They experienced 2x collapses but no other signed of instability.
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From email: "My partner and I skinned up, along the national forest boundary signs just northeast of the north fork trail junction. We had some thoughts about going into middle basin, but before even digging any pits we got a substantial whoomph. I dug a pit on the NE side of the ridge splitting beehive and middle basin around. 9200 ft, I didn’t get propagation or any fracture, the column just mushed down. My partner dug a pit about 20 ft higher and closer to the ridge top, he got an ectp13, it propagated on a crusty layer that was on top of faceted angular grained snow that was on the ground. I dug a pit on the opposite side of the ridge, SW aspect. Did 2 ect tests, I got a fracture only on the first, got ectp17 on the second."
Full Snow Observation ReportRiders in Taylor Fork saw natural avalanches on Saturday, 12/9
Full Snow Observation ReportFrom email: "Solo skier that released a small pocket of snow at the bottom of Super Couloir - he was not caught and it was just the recent new snow and it didn't run far."
Full Snow Observation ReportFrom IG: Natural activity in Beehive Basin
Full Snow Observation ReportStarting around 7500’ on E,S,W aspects we found extensive cracking and wumphing on faceting at the ground layer. Felt wumphs every few steps and had around 30 foot shooting cracks in meadows and on ridgelines. Total snow depth was never more than 45cm
Full Snow Observation ReportGot ECTP10/11 in a pit on an east facing slope at 9100'. The snowpack is about 60cm deep, with 30cm of facets and 30cm of fist to 4 finger hardness new snow . The test failed at the interface of the old facets and new snow.
We decided to keep the skiing to below 30 degrees. After skiing one slope and skinning back up, we noticed widespread cracking around our ski tracks (image), but luckily the terrain was mellow enough that nothing moved.
Full Snow Observation ReportFrom IG on 12/10: "2 slides we triggered remotely in tepee yesterday"
Full Snow Observation ReportWe (a group of 4) skinned up Lionhead Ridge from the ID/MT border and found troubling conditions. Several small whoomphs were observed in the shallower, bushy snow at lower elevations, and we had a massive (~100-foot propagation) whoomph on the ridge proper where the cornice met the ridge. Accompanying those whoomphs, we observed shooting cracks at multiple low-angle locations. We performed 3 separate pits, the shallowest of which was 48cm @8113' and had an ECTP10. The next two pits were 65cm deep and the SnowPilots are attached. Every single pit had sizeable (~3mm) basal faceting and a pencil-hard ice layer sandwiched with more facets above in the lower snowpack. While cutting a PST, the entire column propagated (Q1) above the ice layer at 25cm from the ground. Be careful out there, the snowpack is super touchy.
Full Snow Observation ReportWindier then I expected today at me d elevations adjacent to Bridger while teaching Friends of GNFAC courses. Photos show lots of wind transport during the day.
Felt a few collapses while skinning.
Full Snow Observation ReportObserved a fresh slab avalanche on Mt. Henderson this morning. E, SE aspect, 9,900'.
I skied up to investigate it and would estimate the size of the crown to be 2-4' deep and about 80' wide. Somewhat surprised by the size relative to the starting zone. Likely a natural avalanche (from about 36 hrs ago), but there were fresh sled tracks in the vicinity from yesterday, so possibly a remote trigger.
LOTs of collapsing again today while breaking trail on low angled S, E and W aspects. Some collapses were quite large (100'+ diameter).
Full Snow Observation ReportObserved this natural avalanche on the south summit of Mt Henderson. Slope is SE facing, 9800 ft. This slope is heavily wind loaded. I estimate the crown is two feet deep and the avalanche is D2. Likely occurred on Friday 12/8
Full Snow Observation ReportFrom email:
"While grooming the xc trails in Beaver Creek drainage last night, I observed extensive cracking and collapsing in the 12"+ of new snow. Essentially every slope above the trail would fail as I approached them, some breaking up to 30' away. I know it's not a good sign but was cool to watch.
7,5k'-7,9k' mostly North facing aspect.
Yesterday's addition here was right side up with the initial snow coming in very wet and heavy, while ending in a light fluffy topping which is now getting blown around. Additional trace overnight and currently snowing again at 8am. "
Full Snow Observation ReportFrom facebook message: "North facing slope 15 miles south of west Yellowstone probably 30ish degree slope. Probably 16-18 inch slab"
Full Snow Observation ReportI skinned up the south edge of the apron below the midways today. 12 inches plus or minus, the wind moved it a little. Hard crust underneath up to 3” thick. 3 good whoomphs on the up track and another skier that broke trail above me to the bottom of the first midway said he had a good settlement while he was stomping out a spot. I didn’t see any cracks or any movement but it made me step back
Full Snow Observation ReportFrom email:
"We skied in Republic Creek and Hayden Creek today.
No avalanche activity observed, but we had very widespread collapsing (about 20 large thunderous ones), on all aspects, primarily in the upper elevations.
Snowpit attached from a west aspect at 9700'. HS: 90. ECTP3 @ 54."
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Dug into the hillside right before going up the creek. Snow pack was 75 cm deep consisting of three layers. Bottom 35cm is obviously faceted, grain size is around 2mm. Very thin ice crust at around 35cm. Upper 35 cm of snow is brand new snow from this current storm, precipitation particles, low density, with minor wind effect. Performed a quick Compression Test and the ice crust layer failed on the second tap. Sudden collapse, clean sheer. Snowmobiled a small test slope next to pit and got no shooting cracks or whoompfs.
Full Snow Observation ReportFrom email:
"South of Cooke City today. Good conditions on low-angle open meadows. Fun problem-solving in the trees!
MC/PC/PS/C, seasonal temp (20s), calm.
No collapses or shooting cracks. Corners broke on steeper kick turns. I had a good view of lower (N) Woody Ridge and did not observe any Avalanche activity. I don't trust this shallow snowpack, but really fun low-angle meadow skipping.
HS 74cm; ECTN14 on new-snow M/F interface, ECTP21 on old-snow depth hoar interface."
Full Snow Observation ReportWell I had to go see what the snow was doing today. We climbed the Fallen (about 100m below Climb Above Dribbles). On ascent there were no signs of instability (no cracking, collapsing, naturals, good results in hand pits, etc). New snow had accumulated to around 1m in spots however! No activity in the old snow, which seemingly gained some strength in the warm weather midweek (hardness in FCs went from fist to 4F from mon-fri).
During the day, snowfall rates hit S2 at times, and accumulation was around 5 cm, with moderate winds and moderate drifting. On descent this new snow was touchy, and we observed 2 natural avalanches, max depth 15 cm, on the small end of size 1, F hardness, running less than 30-50m exclusively in new snow. (SS-N-R1D1-N)
Structure remains poor overall.
Full Snow Observation Report