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The UAC is proud to present "To the Hills & Back", a heart-wrenching documentary that delves into the lives of two backcountry skiers, Katie Combaluzier and Adam Campbell, who navigate through the aftermath of separate avalanche tragedies. This film is a testament to human endurance and the transformative power of adversity.
Watch it here.
This morning, the skies are overcast, and it is lightly snowing in the mountains with no measurable accumulation yet. Temperatures have dropped since yesterday. As of 6 AM, it was 28°F, with a total snow depth of 108 inches at the Tony Grove Snotel (8438'). At our new Card Canyon weather station (8750'), the temperature was already 24°F, with a total snow depth of 83.6 inches, about 0.1" of new snow this morning. Meanwhile, at the CSI Logan Peak weather station (9700'), it's 22°F, with winds blowing from the southwest at 22 mph and gusts up to 43 mph. Similarly, on Paris Peak (9500'), it's 20°F, with winds blowing from the southwest at 11 mph and gusts up to 20 mph.
Today, the storm will arrive, bringing moderate snowfall and elevated winds. Temperatures will warm into the upper 20s °F and low 30s °F. Winds will remain more southwesterly throughout the day before transitioning more easterly tonight and remaining elevated throughout the day, averaging 15-20 mph and gusting up to 30 at mid-elevations, with gusts near 45 at upper-elevation ridgelines. We could see 4-8" of new snow before 5 PM and 10-12" of new snow by tomorrow morning.
Outlook: Precipitation will become widespread across northern and central Utah today, extending to the southern half overnight. More instability on Wednesday will lower snow levels, mainly affecting mountain areas with limited valley accumulations expected. By Thursday, the precipitation threat will diminish in the northwest but persist in the southeast, with the potential for significant downslope winds in prone areas.
As of yesterday, there was still a bit of lingering well-settled powder that can still be found in the protected shady upper and mid-elevation terrain, although the cold areas were rapidly diminishing. Most slopes had a firm crust that became damp as the day progressed. Snow depth from the past week's storms is notably deeper at higher elevations but has settled well."