The
5th Annual Avalanche Awareness Week is December 3-10. The week's goal is to save lives through activities that promote avalanche awareness, education, and safety. We have a variety of events around the state.
Find an event near you.
Current Conditions: Temperatures were quite warm on Tuesday pushing into the low to mid 40s and dropping back into the mid 20s overnight. Wind from the southwest is slowly starting to increase this morning but still remains fairly light. Average snow depths in the higher terrain average 20 inches with the more favored locations over two feet.
Mountain Weather: We'll have mostly sunny skies with temperatures again pushing up to around 40 in the high country. Wind from the southwest will be light to moderate in speed, gradually increasing as the day goes on. The storm for Thursday into Friday still does not look very promising to me this morning and I'm only expecting a few inches total by Saturday. There are more chances for snow starting Sunday and into mid week.
My partner and I remotely triggered (triggered from a distance) a medium sized avalanche on Tuesday. It released in a small northwest facing bowl at about 10,500 feet in elevation. We did not realize it had released until we were backtracking back down the mountain and stumbled onto it. It was 24 to 30 inches deep and approximately 150' wide. It produced a pile of debris about 5 or 6 feet deep.