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Forecast for the Logan Area Mountains

Toby Weed
Issued by Toby Weed on
Saturday morning, March 4, 2017

The danger is MODERATE: Snow is deep and mostly stable, but wind slab and cornice fall avalanches are possible on drifted upper elevation slopes. Sun and warm temperatures will cause a rising danger of loose wet avalanches in sunny and low elevation terrain. Use normal caution, avoid travel on or under large cornices, drifted slopes, and steep sunny terrain in the heat of the day.

Low
Moderate
Considerable
High
Extreme
Learn how to read the forecast here
Weather and Snow

The Tony Grove Snotel ​at 8400' reports 34 F and 117"of total snow with 165% of average SWE (Snow Water Equivalent)​. It's 27 F at the 9700' CSI Logan Peak weather station, and a south-southeast wind is blowing 32 mph, gusting to 51 mph. Snow is deep, settled and mostly stable. The danger is LOW on most slopes this morning, but avalanches are still possible. Only expose one person at a time, and watch each other from safe places. Recent growth of large cornices, drifting from south wind overnight, high angled sun and temperatures well above freezing are creating heightened avalanche conditions on drifted upper elevation and sun warmed slopes. Don't linger under cornices or steep sunny slopes because natural avalanches might occur, especially during the heat of the day.

Recent Avalanches

There was some natural wind slab, cornice fall, and loose avalanche activity during the stormy weather earlier in the week. Recent storm snow avalanches did not step into old layers. Thursday a party triggered a small wind slab on a very steep roll in the Tony Grove Area, and natural cornice falls and wind slabs were observed in the Wellsville and Central Bear River Ranges.


A recent natural wind slab avalanche on the southeast face of Mount Gog. (3/2/2017)

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Avalanche Problem #1
Wind Drifted Snow
Type
Location
Likelihood
Size
Description

South winds increased overnight and likely formed stiff drifts along exposed ridges.

  • Hard wind slabs are often stubborn and sometimes allow people to get out on them before releasing.
  • Avoid wind slabs on the lee side of ridges and in and around terrain features like gullies, scoops, sub-ridges, and cliff-bands.
Avalanche Problem #2
Cornice
Type
Location
Likelihood
Size
Description
  • Huge, overhanging cornices can break further back than expected and trigger avalanches on slopes below. Solar warming and rising temperatures may cause some cornices to buckle and calve.

Cornice Fall on Castle Rock. (3/2/17)


Avalanche Problem #3
Wet Snow
Type
Location
Likelihood
Size
Description

Warmth and sun create heightened wet avalanche conditions on sunny slopes during the heat of the day. Loose wet avalanches entraining significant piles of moist fresh snow are possible.

  • If you see roller balls, pin wheels, or natural sluffs, it's time to leave.
  • Avoid being on or under steep slopes with saturated surface snow.


Recent natural wet loose avalanches in Wood Camp Hollow. (3/3/17)

Additional Information

High pressure will shift east this weekend ahead of a cold Pacific storm, which will cross the Great Basin Sunday through Monday. Expect partly cloudy conditions, a high temperature at 8500' of 37 F and southwest wind 25 to 30 mph​, gusting to 40 mph. It will be mostly cloudy tonight, low temperature of 27 F and 25 mph south-southwest wind. Snow will arrive tomorrow after about 11:00 AM, high temperature of 35 F, and southwest wind increasing to around 30 mph, gusting near 50 mph. Snow and wind will continue Sunday night, with 14 to 22 inches of new snow possible by Monday morning.


General Announcements

Do you buy groceries at Smiths? When you register your Smith’s rewards card with their Community Rewards program, they will donate to the Utah Avalanche Center whenever you make a purchase. It's easy, only takes a minute, and doesn't cost you anything. Details here.

Discount lift tickets for Beaver Mountain, Snowbasin, Powder Mountain, and the Central Wasatch resorts are donated by the resorts to benefit the Utah Avalanche Center. Details and order information here.

If you sign up for AmazonSmile and designate the Utah Avalanche Center as your favorite charity, they will donate a portion of everything you spend to the UAC. It doesn't cost you a penny and we'd really appreciate the help.

Your information can save lives. If you see anything we should know please help us out by submitting snow and avalanche observations. You can call us at 801-524-5304, email by clicking HERE, or include @utavy in your Instagram. In the Logan Area you can reach me at 435-757-7578

We will update this advisory regularly on Monday, Wednesday, Friday, and Saturday mornings by about 7:30.

This advisory is from the U.S.D.A. Forest Service, which is solely responsible for its content. This advisory describes general avalanche conditions and local variations always exist.