Snow Observations List
We rode on Buck Ridge today to do some maintenance on our RAWS station for the fire folks and check on the yellow mule cabin. Where the wind hadn't blown it away yet, there was 4" of snow from over night on top of very firm snow, likely from the last round of wind. The most sheltered areas behind trees and down in the basins still had some deeper, soft snow and better riding. We saw one small wind slab avalanche in the new snow above Beaver Creek on a north aspect.
Full Snow Observation ReportI toured up to hyalite lake today to check out how the west facing walls in the main fork of hyalite (hyalite lake drainage ) were stabilizing after last weeks wind. On Friday I noticed “Provo’s run” (large path near overlook mtn) slid from the top which appeared to have slid due to the heavy wind loading. The slid looked to be about 24” deep and ran full path . So today I checked out the west facing walls close the hyalite lake and around 9500’ the upper sections of these slid paths were wind effected and unstable, and I did not ride them
I dug a pit around 9500’ on the west facing wall near the lake and got unstable results. ECTP 11 which propagated below the recent wind load from last week.
the snow pack is 240 cm deep and is nice and consolidated without any major layers on several of the pits I dug at several elevations on these upper elevation west facing walls accept for the wind load on the upper elevations pits
Full Snow Observation Report
We triggered and were caught in an avalanche very near town. We skied the east side of Miller, dropped down to descend the very eastern slope just above town. While standing on approximately a 30-35 degree slope we experienced a release immediately above us. The crown line was approximately 18-24" and extended appx 50' across. We were caught for about 150' before coming to a stop and buried to the thigh. The entire slide was appx 400' from top to bottom. It was appx a D2.
Full Snow Observation ReportToday we toured to a ridge across from the west face of Republic Mountain. We observed multiple natural avalanches on several aspects. Winds were calm until around noon, and then picked up in the afternoon and were heavily loading north aspects at this location.
Full Snow Observation ReportFrom email 2/26/23: "I just talked with a fella that reported his buddy was buried up to his chest in an avalanche yesterday off of east abundance, near the cliffs. He reported a 4' crown and 200' wide. His buddy was snowmobiling."
Full Snow Observation ReportTriggered wind slab in southern Gallatins
Full Snow Observation ReportExperienced whumpfs, cracking, and remotely triggered collapses on E aspects at 9000’ near ridgelines. The wind slabs were very reactive but thin, ranging from 2” to 5” deep.
Full Snow Observation ReportFrom IG message 2/25/23: "Hey just wanted to report a Cooke city avalanche from today. Happened at 3pm caused by a skier coming down a south facing slope above Round Lake. Everyone was fine, he lost his skis and everyone learned"
Full Snow Observation ReportFrom email 2/25/23: "... a good sized slab avalanche on Fan, NE Face. Crown height hard to estimate but looked like a 2’ or so. Maybe running on interface from when it got cold earlier in the week? Possibly deeper than that but sure could have loaded that much this week. Anyway- very white bed surface, good propagation, 200’ -300’ crown length, debris stopped on upper bench. D2.5. Likely triggered by cornice fall."
Full Snow Observation ReportThis natural avalanche was seen today on E. Henderson Bench.
Full Snow Observation ReportOn Saturday we toured up Sheep Creek and dug a pit on an SW aspect of Miller Mountain. We observed that the wind slab easily failed and propagated at this location. Shifting winds continued to load multiple aspects throughout the day. On the southwest ridge of Mineral Mountain we observed a large slide, approximately 200ft wide, that appeared to trigger another slide lower down on the slope.
Full Snow Observation ReportAs we were skinning up a north facing slope on Knowles Peak, a roughly 20 by 20 foot section of the slope collapsed beneath our feet. We were on a slope steep enough to slide and it didn't, but we took that as a clear sign of instability and skied down. We then went up the south side of Arrow, mostly on mellower terrain before gaining the east ridge, and continued up. 400 feet from the summit we encountered a very steep, wind affected pitch, and decided not to continue up. We skied down the south gully, mostly in the trees and avoiding wide open slopes. South and east facing aspects were certainly heating up throughout the day and the ski down was hot pow.
Full Snow Observation ReportA snowmobiler saw this natural avalanche hit the Daisy Pass road within 10 minutes of riding by. He did a beacon search on the debris to confirm no one had been caught. It occurred about noon. This path is not very visible from the bottom and is not one that runs regularly. It killed a rider who was on the road in February 2012. The accident report has good photos of the path from afar.
Wind-loading in the start zone was the likely trigger since skiers and sledders do not access it.
From an email: "The crown was hard to see, but only looked a few feet deep where I could see it, but the debris pile was 10'+ on the road."
A big thanks to Dan Wykoff and Ben Zavora for providing the story and pictures.
Full Snow Observation ReportWe rode to Round Lake, Goose Lake wilderness boundary and Lulu Pass. We saw a coulpe of small and very steep avalanches that released in the new snow. We dug 3 pits and got ECTX or ECTN28 on the new/old snow interface 2-3 feet under the surface. We were glad to not find propogation. Wind ramped up during the morning creating white-out conditions at time. At Lulu Pass we went to investigate wind slabs and got a collapse (whumf) when we stepped on it. Wind-loaded slopes are dangerous right now. Slopes ae actively loading and sensitive to triggering.
Full Snow Observation ReportCame across this very large cornice that appeared to have broken naturally sometime in the past 24 hours. Saw a few others that had broken recently throughout our tour, but none as large as this.
Full Snow Observation ReportFrom IG message 2/24/23: HS-N-R2.5-D2-O. In emigrant gulch on an east aspect around 9k feet. Seemed to have stepped down on to a PWL, however it’s pretty tough to tell.
Full Snow Observation Report
From IG: Skiers near Mt. Blackmore on 2/24 saw a large avalanche on the east side of Mt. Blackmore that appeared to have happened in the last 24 hours.
Full Snow Observation ReportTriggered a small 2’ deep wind slab in new snow this afternoon. NNE aspect 9,500’, approximately 38° slope. Riding was excellent on all high North facing slopes and this was the only sign of instability we saw all day. Wind was howling on the way out, lots of snow coming out of the trees and transporting at ridge tops.
Full Snow Observation Report