Under mostly clear skies, the mountain temperatures are cold and range from 10-16 °F. Winds continue to blow from the northwest but have slowed dramatically, and only a few anemometers report 5-10 mph wind speeds. At 11,000', the winds are a little stronger and blow from the northwest at 10-20 mph. The storm did not produce well for the Provo area, and for the past 24 hours storm totals ranged from 1 to 3 inches of new snow (0.06-0.20 water).
Today, we will have clearing skies as the storm exits and high-pressure returns. Winds should be on their best behavior and only blow 5-15 mph from the north. It will be a cold day as temperatures will only climb into the upper teens °F by this afternoon.
The recent storm has improved the riding and turning conditions, especially on aspects that still had dry cold snow underneath. On sunny slopes, there is a hard, slick, frozen crust in many spots where backcountry riders reported needing ski crampons in steep exposed terrain.
No new observations or avalanches.