We've completed the report on last Saturday's tragic avalanche in the backcountry in Mill Creek Canyon above Salt Lake City that killed four skiers.
Final Accident Report
The UAC in Logan is offering a Youth BC 101 avalanche class for youth aged 16-20 on Feb 21. For more info and to register, click
HERE
*VERY DANGEROUS AVALANCHE CONDITIONS EXIST IN THE BACKCOUNTRY*
Light snow is falling in the Bear River Range this morning, but only a little fell overnight. It's almost 20 degrees cooler than it was yesterday morning, currently 9°F and there is 65 inches of total snow at the 8400' Tony Grove Snotel. Northwest winds are blowing around 15 mph at the 9700' CSI Logan Peak weather station this morning. Strong westerly winds last week drifted tremendous quantities of snow into lee slope avalanche starting zones and cross-loaded drifts in exposed terrain lower down. Thick drifts and hard wind slabs exist in wind deposition areas, while the snow is still super shallow and very weak in more sheltered and scoured areas.
With widespread layers of preexisting very weak snow, the recent significant increase in load on the fragile snowpack has created very dangerous avalanche conditions on drifted slopes in the backcountry.
It's snowing lightly this morning and more snow showers are expected today in the mountains, but accumulations will be light. High temperatures at 8500' will be around 13°F, with east-northeast winds veering from the west-southwest in the afternoon, and wind chill values as low as -14°F.
A dangerous avalanche situation exists this holiday weekend in the backcountry, with very dangerous avalanche conditions and lots of nice powder to lure people into steep avalanche terrain.
A snow stability test on a drifted mid elevation slope on the eastern slope of the Bear River Range showed unstable snow conditions on 2-10-2021. The extended column test was done near a recent remotely triggered avalanche of wind drifted snow at 7600' on an east-northeast facing slope.
Yesterday a couple local backcountry skiers remotely triggered a large avalanche in "the Gut" of White Pine Knob above the yurt in the popular Bunch Grass Canyon. The 3' deep and about 300' wide avalanche occurred on a southeast facing slope at around 8900' in elevation.
Thursday, riders remotely triggered a large hard slab avalanche on a pretty low angled slope in the Peter Sinks Area (an area that is not well known for avalanches). The avalanche on an east facing slope at around 8300' in elevation was around 100 feet wide and 2 to 7 feet deep, and it stacked large chunks and piles of debris into the trees below. It was the third such avalanche to occur this week on a fairly low angled slope (between 30 and 35 degrees) and in a rather unexpected place. All have been in the eastern part of the Bear River Range...