UDOT PLANNED AVALANCHE CLOSURES!!

Forecast for the Uintas Area Mountains

Craig Gordon
Issued by Craig Gordon for
Saturday, January 29, 2022
Today, you'll find LOW avalanche danger and human triggered avalanches are unlikely on all aspects and elevations.
Although avalanches are unlikely, there is always some chance of triggering a slide which is why we always carry avalanche rescue gear. Consider a quick (5 minutes) practice run with your avalanche transceiver at one of the Beacon Basin training sites at Bear River or Nobletts trail heads.
Low
Moderate
Considerable
High
Extreme
Learn how to read the forecast here
Weather and Snow
NOWCAST-
Above the developing valley gunk, skies are clear, the air is fresh, and the mountains anxiously await for your arrival! Winds are light and westerly, blowing just 5-15 mph even along the high peaks and temperatures generally register in the mid 20's with a few inverted outliers recording in the teens. No new snow to report since Tuesday's mighty two inches helped smooth things out, going a long way to refresh the snow surface.
FORECAST-
High pressure homesteads over the region through the weekend. Expect sunny skies, light winds, and temperatures climbing into the mid 30's. Overnight lows dip into the 20's.
FUTURECAST-
A tranquil weather run ends with increasing winds on tap for Monday and a weak storm sliding through the region for Tuesday and Wednesday. We might be able to squeak a couple inches of snow out this system, but it's looking rather dry.

High on the Upper Weber Canyon ridgeline, PC Cat snow-pros and local mountain goats Dave Kikkert and Joel O'Rourke contemplate their options whilst channeling a Stealers Wheels oldie... "Crowns to the left of me, corni to the right... here I am, stuck in the middle with you" :)

Looking for real-time temps, snow, or wind?
Click HERE and then on the "western Uinta" tab for western Uinta specific, weather station network.
Recent Avalanches
Other than a few very small, dry, sluffs; there has been no avalanche activity.

Click HERE for a list of recent avalanches.
A list of all other observations is found HERE

Your input is vital and we're interested in what you're seeing. Please contribute to this great community resource and go here to fill out an observation.
Ad
Avalanche Problem #1
Normal Caution
Type
Location
Likelihood
Size
Description
You'd be hard pressed to trigger an avalanche today, though winds blew earlier in the week and a rogue pocket or two in a cross-loaded chute above treeline isn't totally out of the question. So, with generally Green Light conditions, of course we're setting our sights on tagging big terrain. However, before diving head first, pump the brakes for a second and evaluate each slope on an individual basis. If I'm in steep, committing terrain, I consider the consequences of triggering even a small slide which could knock me off me feet and instantly ruin my day.
Snow geek-speak-
Not much going on at the moment, but looking in the future - the snow surface is getting whiplash from cold temperatures at night and warm temperatures during the day. The result is that many slopes have very weak, faceted snow close to the surface or what we call Near Surface Facets (NSF). This weak snow was capped by Tuesday's few inches of snow. Mark found it late in the week in Soapstone (photo below of buried surface hoar).
I found it on steep slopes in Chalk Creek yesterday where both the surface snow and NSF are so weak, it simply sluffs, fanning out below you. For now, Tuesday's new snow just caps and preserves this weak layer. It won't be an avalanche problem until more snow stacks on top.
Additional Information
While we're waiting patiently for winter to return from its hiatus, take a few minutes and visit one of our beacon parks and test your rescue skills. Ted installed a Beacon Basin at the Bear River Trailhead and there's another park found at the northeast corner of the Nobletts Trailhead.
Your observations are important, so please let me know what you're seeing... click HERE and contribute to this amazing community based program
General Announcements
The information in this forecast expires 24 hours after the day and time posted, but will be updated by 07:00 Sunday January 30th.
Before it gets too crazy, now is the time to book an avalanche awareness presentation for your group, club, or posse. You can reach me directly at 801-231-2170 or [email protected]
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.