Under overcast skies with light snow falling mountain temperatures range from the mid 20's F at the trailheads to the low teens F at 11,000'. Westerly winds are blowing into the low teens MPH at the 9000' ridgelines and gusting into the low 40's MPH at the 11,000' ridglines. New snow blankets the Wasatch from the top of the mountains all the way to the valley. Ski areas reported 5-11" of new snow. Yesterday there were reports of brief rain below 8000' before turning to snow.
For today, snow 3-6" forecasted with periods of up to 1" an hour this morning. Temperatures 24-28 F with westerly winds 15 gusting to 25 MPH at the 9000' ridgelines and 25 gusting to 40 MPH at the 11,000' ridgelines. There will be a couple of waves of precipitation throughout the day. Expect to see periods of clearing followed by bursts of snow. Freezing level is forecast to be around 6400'.
Yesterday the UAC joined Park City Snow Safety to look at an
avalanche that was triggered late in the day on Saturday December 4th. This avalanche was within Park City Ski Area's boundary in closed terrain that is representative of a backcountry snowpack. This avalanche is one of the biggest reported thus far on the November drought layer.
Photo: deepest part of the crown 6' (Park City Snow Safety)
Photo: Nalli/White showing wind slab over a weak layer in
Soldier Fork.
We continue to see deep
avalanches reported by backcountry skiers and ski patrols. These avalanches will only get bigger as we add more snow and wind to an already weak layer. Yesterday we went to look at an avalanche near the Brighton periphery that ran into the flats on an east facing slope off Clayton Peak. The wind was continuing to re-load this slope and is a location where we are likely to see skier triggered avalanches in the future. Remember that as soon as you leave the ski area boundary you are in backcountry terrain.