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Forecast for the Salt Lake Area Mountains

Mark Staples
Issued by Mark Staples on
Tuesday morning, February 15, 2022
Today avalanche conditions are generally safe, human triggered avalanches are unlikely, and the avalanche danger is LOW.
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Special Announcements
Message from PCMR Ski Patrol: "Scott's Bowl through Scott's Pass is now within Park City Mountain Resorts (PCMR) operating terrain, and Pinecone Ridge on the PCMR side is closed to backcountry travel."
Weather and Snow
Currently: Clouds have moved over the area this morning, and temperatures range from the mid 20s to mid 30s F. Winds blowing from the south increased overnight and are blowing 16-35 mph gusting to 60 mph. Even at lower elevations winds are gusting to 20 mph.
Today: Clouds will continue to increase today. There could be some snow falling later today but none will accumulate. A cold front will pass overhead this afternoon and keep temperatures about where they are this morning. Winds will continue until after the front passes when they will become light.
Tonight and Tomorrow: Snow will come tonight and tomorrow bringing only a few inches to most areas. The upper Cottonwood Canyons could get up to 6 inches. More snow should hopefully come late Sunday night.

It has been over a month since any real snowfall occurred, and snow conditions reflect that lack of new snow. The snow surface is important because it will determine avalanche conditions in the coming weeks and possibly months. Slopes shaded from wind and sun have a thick layer of weak faceted snow. Many other slopes have a crust of varying thickness with facets under it. Many slopes at upper elevations have been eroded and sculped by winds, and popular areas have lots of old tracks.
In general, there is plenty of weak snow on the surface, but its distribution is very complex, and will not follow a clear, easy-to-map pattern. As snow begins to accumulate in the coming week or two, I anticipate that avalanche conditions will become very tricky.
Recent Avalanches
There have been no avalanches reported
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Avalanche Problem #1
Normal Caution
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Description
Take normal precautions today which always means carrying avalanche rescue gear, traveling with a partner, and only exposing one person at a time to avalanche terrain. Strong winds from the south likely can't find any snow to transport, but there may be a few, very small, isolated hard slabs of wind drifted snow that could be triggered if they are resting on weak, near-surface, faceted snow. If you can find soft snow, it is faceted snow which can easily sluff on steep slopes. Two separate incidents involving skiers caught and carried in loose sluffs on Saturday highlight this issue.
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.