Forecast for the Ogden Area Mountains

Nikki Champion
Issued by Nikki Champion for
Thursday, March 17, 2022
Today, a MODERATE avalanche danger exists on all steep northwest to north to east-facing slopes. While the snowpack is slowly showing signs of increasing stability, triggering a deadly avalanche 2-4' feet deep within the January/February facets remains possible. We have entered the era of low probability, high consequence.
A MODERATE danger also exists where wet snow avalanches may be triggered as the snow surface heats up. Avoid being on steep solar aspects when the snow has become wet and unsupportable.

Travel Advice: Careful snowpack evaluation, cautious route-finding, and conservative decision-making skills are still required today.
Low
Moderate
Considerable
High
Extreme
Learn how to read the forecast here
Special Announcements
Drew Hardesty is a Blogging machine: A new piece called " A Reckoning " talks about the recent string of human-triggered avalanches.
The Accident report from March 12th in Silver Fork is now published. You can read the report HERE.
Weather and Snow
This morning, there are a few clouds in the sky, and mountain temperatures range in the upper teens and low 20s °F. Winds are calm and blowing northwest at speeds of 5-10 mph across the mid-elevations, and 15-20 mph across upper elevations. Over the past 24 hours, the mountains picked up roughly 1 additional inch of new snow.
Today, we will remain under a northwest flow with wind speeds of 15-25 mph across the upper elevation ridgelines. Wind speeds should be the highest in the morning and decrease throughout the day. Skies will become sunny, and mountain temperatures will climb into the mid-30s °F by this afternoon.
It's spring, and the weather can turn on a dime. Be sure to pay attention to changing conditions, i.e., sunshine hitting cold powder, green housing, or strong bands of snow (precipitation intensity). All of these weather events usually spike avalanche activity.
Recent Avalanches
Yesterday, no new avalanches were reported from the Ogden area mountains. We finally got a welcome break from the close calls.
Within the Central Wasatch, on the lower flanks of Argenta, the snow surface became wet and wet loose avalanches were beginning to occur on a Northwest aspect near 8000'. Find full observation HERE.
Photo of the wet snow (R. Costa)
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Avalanche Problem #1
Persistent Weak Layer
Type
Location
Likelihood
Size
Description
Many large and dangerous human-triggered avalanches have occurred over the past several days, failing on a layer of faceted snow (a persistent weak layer) that formed during the January/February drought. Avalanches failing on this weak layer are 2-4' deep and well over 100' wide and can easily catch, carry, bury, and kill a human.
Now is a difficult time because triggering one of these avalanches is getting a little harder to do each day, and there may not be as many obvious signs of instability while traveling. The challenge is, avalanches issues don't just turn on and then turn off after a few days. Instead, the odds of triggering a slide decreases just a little each day, and then increases again when it snows or the wind loads a slope. Unfortunately, we don't know the exact odds of triggering one of these deadly slides; we just know it remains possible today.
There will come a time we can begin pushing it out onto north-facing slopes with confidence, but that time isn't quite here yet. Just because the likelihood has decreased doesn't mean the problem no longer exists. Personally, I am going to continue to avoid being on or below slopes steeper than 30 degrees on the north side of the compass for the time being. I have very little confidence in the snowpack right now. If you do choose to ride slopes where this layer exists, stack the odds in your favor by choosing slopes with a clean runout zone free of trees and rocks that would cause trauma if you do trigger an avalanche.
A few things to remember when dealing with persistent weak layers.
  • Persistent weak layers can be triggered remotely, from a distance, or from below. Look at the avalanche in Millcreek.
  • Avalanches can happen on short steep slopes in "what we think is benign terrain." Remember, avalanche terrain is anything over 30° in steepness. Read Lucky Days & Silver Fork.
  • This avalanche problem can produce very large avalanches that run long distances. Look at the slide in Mineral Fork.
  • Signs of instability may not always be present: you may or may not see or experience shooting cracks or audible collapsing.
  • Tracks on the slope offer zero signs of stability. Avalanches can take out multiple existing tracks.

A valuable note from Trent yesterday: "By my count, we've had eight very close calls, and in fact, all of these close calls are by people that are either avalanche professionals or very experienced backcountry riders. This tells me that if the avalanche professionals are getting it wrong, we all need to take two steps back, and re-evaluate our decisions."
Avalanche Problem #2
Wet Snow
Type
Location
Likelihood
Size
Description
Warm temperatures and direct sun will create unstable wet snow avalanche problems on steep west to south to southeast facing slopes today, and even lower elevation north-facing slopes. These wet avalanches have the capacity to run far and entrain tons of snow in steep confined terrain.
Timing is the name of the game. Avoid being on steep solar aspects when the snow has become wet and unsupportable.
Signs that wet avalanches will start happening include; seeing other small wet slides, seeing snowballs or pinwheels roll downhill with increasing frequency, and seeing upper layers of snow become increasingly wet.
General Announcements
Who's up for some free avalanche training? Get a refresher, become better prepared for an upcoming avalanche class, or just boost your skills. Go to https://learn.kbyg.org/ and scroll down to Step 2 for a series of interactive online avalanche courses produced by the UAC.
This information does not apply to developed ski areas or highways where avalanche control is normally done. This forecast is from the U.S.D.A. Forest Service, which is solely responsible for its content. This forecast describes general avalanche conditions and local variations always occur.