The Winter Storm Warning continues through Monday morning.
Could a decaying atmospheric river be denied?
It's been a powerhouse: strong wind, heavy dense snowfall, blowing and drifting snow, rising temperatures. And the storm rages on. I'll admit it's a bit of a cruel joke: imagine all this sierra cement over Friday's 5% blower powder...but it's short term pain for long term gain as we build up our snowpack for the winter.
Overnight snow and water numbers are below with storm snow and water. So far...
LCC: 12"/1.18" SWE..... Storm: 36"/2.43" SWE
BCC: 6"/0.59" SWE..... Storm: 18"/1.40" SWE
PC: 6-10"/1.23" SWE..... Storm: 12-20"/up to 1.70" SWE
Ogden: 8-12"/1.40"SWE..... Storm: 14-20"/2.5-4.0" SWE (4.0" at Ben Lomond)
Provo: 6-12"/2.21" SWE (Sundance)..... Storm: 20-30"/3.29" SWE at Sundance
Aside from all the snow, winds from the west-northwest have been merciless and punishing at all elevations. At 11,000', another violent gust just after midnight hit 109mph and even the low/mid elevation anemometers are spinning 25mph gusting 45mph. Mountain temperatures have climbed into the mid to upper 20s.
For today, we'll see continued, albeit diminished, snowfall rates with moderate to strong winds from the west-northwest. Temperatures will be in the mid to upper 20s. I expect an additional 8-14" of snow through tomorrow morning, where the winds, finally, start to lose steam. We start to clear by Monday afternoon with a warming trend pushing mountain temperatures into the upper 30s to upper 40s (mid-elevations) by Tuesday. A weak system follows for Thursday.
Backcountry travelers reported triggering shallow soft slab avalanches in the the wind zone yesterday while others reported very little cohesive slab development. As a sure sign of things to come, one long time observer triggered a large avalanche along the Park City ridgeline from 150' away. The avalanche in West Monitor is estimated to be 2-3' deep and 300' wide, running on the old weak sugary snow from October/November. Ski areas in the upper Cottonwood also triggered large avalanches in this weak layering in upper elevation northerly terrain. Cracking and collapsing are the rule and not the exception.
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