Avalanche Trivia is back at Hopkins Brewing on March 8th, starting at 7 PM! Bring your friends and test them on their knowledge, while giving back to the UAC. See details HERE
Under mostly clear skies, mountain temperatures this morning range from 19–24°F. The wind picked up overnight and is now blowing from the northwest at 5–15 mph across most upper elevation ridgelines. At 11,000 feet, the free air is moving a bit faster, with speeds in the 15–25 mph range.
This morning, some high clouds drift overhead as a cut-off low spins well to our south. Up above, the main jet stream remains parked to our north, keeping our wind flowing out of the west-northwest. As the morning goes on, those clouds should gradually thin and burn off, giving way to plenty of March sunshine. Mountain temperatures will climb into the low to mid 30s °F this afternoon.
With the recent storm laying down 1 to 3 feet of new snow, riding and turning conditions are about as good as they get right now. Expect southerly-facing terrain to hold a crust this morning that should soften as the day warms and the sun does its work. Shady aspects continue to hold dry, cold snow.
Yesterday, one notable human-triggered avalanche was reported in upper Mineral Fork in the Room of Doom (pic below). It appears to have been a soft wind slab roughly 2 feet deep and about 150 feet wide, running nearly 1,000 vertical feet down the slope. It sounds like the rider triggered the avalanche, deployed their airbag, and skied off the slab. Nobody was caught.
It was also a great day for avalanche sightseeing, with many people sending in photos of large, well-connected avalanches across the range. A few notable ones include Coal Pit, Stairs, Ice Box, and Blue Ice.

Photo: Matt B showing the tracks leading into the avalanche in Room of Doom.