We are deeply saddened to report that one of the skiers involved in the Butler Basin accident on Saturday, February 21, has died from injuries sustained in the avalanche. Our deepest condolences go out to the victim’s family, friends, and everyone impacted by this tragic accident.
A new blog is posted Riding the Ski Lift With My Daughter. This piece was written to us by longtime friend and backcountry skier John Climaco.
Overnight, skies were mostly clear, and temperatures cooled into the upper 20s to mid 30s °F. This shallow refreeze won't last long for low and mid-elevation slopes. Winds continued to blow from the WNW at 10-20 mph with gusts into the upper 20s.
Today, we'll see mostly sunny skies, with temperatures rising into the 40s °F. Moderate wind continues to blow from the WNW at 10-20 mph, and gusts are possible into the 30s, especially along the high ridges.
There were no reported avalanches from the backcountry yesterday, but on Wednesday, ski area avalanche teams reported large wet slab avalanches failing on PWL and gouging down near the ground.
Four people were killed in separate avalanche accidents in the past nine days.
- Wednesday 2/18 Ant Knolls, Wasatch Back Fatality — Snowmobiler. Final report HERE.
- Thursday 2/19 Rock Garden, BCC (Brighton Backcountry) Fatality — 11-year-old skier. Preliminary report HERE.
- Saturday 2/21 Butler Basin, BCC - Fatality — Backcountry skier. Preliminary report HERE.
- Sunday 2/22 Caribou Basin, Wasatch Back Fatality — Snowbiker. Preliminary report HERE.
All of these accidents involved slab avalanches 2-3' thick and up to 500' wide failing on weak faceted snow, our January Dry Layer (JDL). There's something else to point out - in nearly all of these and many other close calls, the individual or party triggered the avalanche from below while in gentle terrain. It's not enough to be on low-angle terrain: you can collapse the slope and pull the avalanche down on top of you.

Very large hard slab avalanche from Sunday's snowbike fatality in Caribou Basin near Midway. (photo: Torrey)