Forecast for the Provo Area Mountains

Brooke Maushund
Issued by Brooke Maushund on
Tuesday morning, January 27, 2026

The snowpack is generally stable and the avalanche danger is LOW. Our primary concerns are small slides able to knock us off our feet in consequential terrain. Watch for sensitive wind-drifted slabs in exposed terrain at mid and upper elevations. Loose dry sluffs of weak snow, or facet-lanches, are becoming deeper and more common in steep, sheltered northerly terrain.

Ice Climbers: Consider the terrain above you and the potential for loose dry drifts while planning your climb and belays.

Low
Moderate
Considerable
High
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Weather and Snow

Yesterday, cold clear weather persisted with mountain highs hitting the high teens to low 20s F under mostly sunny skies. Winds from the west blew 10-25 mph, with gusts into the mid 20s to 30s mph able to transport dry, faceted surface snow.

Today will be slightly different from yesterday (!) as high cloud cover moves in and out with periods of sun and mid-level clouds. Temps will rise into the high 20s F, and winds will be similar to yesterday.

Looking ahead, a small system passes to our north tomorrow, but won't have much impact. While the weather isn’t exactly what we’ve been hoping for—it’s never a GOOD thing when the NWS remarks in the morning include the words “boring” and “depressing”— it is a great time right now to explore terrain we normally wouldn’t be able to to get into this time of year….and—you never know what’s coming on day 11 of a 10 day forecast. Or day 15 of a 14 day model run. I’ll be holding out...

Recent Avalanches

No recent avalanche activity, however...

Sierra Bishop and forecaster Nikki Champion rode near Pole Line Pass yesterday and found degrading road and coverage conditions on solars, along with continued weakening of the snowpack.

You can view all recent observations here.

Avalanche Problem #1
Normal Caution
Type
Location
Likelihood
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Description

The persistent ridge of high pressure also means persistently, generally stable avalanche conditions. Still, generally stable does not mean completely. We're mostly keeping an eye out for small slides that can knock you off your feet in/above consequential terrain.

Keep an eye out for:

  • Loose dry sluffs of weak snow, particularly on very steep slopes, especially where the snow remains shallow or unconsolidated. As the snow surface continues to weaken, loose dry sluffs will become more common and deeper. Managing these requires attention and strategic skiing.
  • Small wind slabs in exposed terrain at mid and upper elevations. These drifts will be sensitive as they've formed atop very weak snow. Their size potential is the same as the sluffs above, but again—be aware of the consequences of being knocked off your feet in the terrain you're in.

Long walks into far terrain and beacon practice have been on my menu lately. Now's a great time for both.

General Announcements

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.