Forecast for the Uintas Area Mountains
Issued by Craig Gordon on
Thursday morning, January 9, 2025
Thursday morning, January 9, 2025
Today's avalanche dragon has several tails and a variety of tales to tell-
First... CONSIDERABLE avalanche danger is found in the windzone, above treeline in terrain facing northwest through north through southeast. While pockety and becoming harder to initiate, human-triggered avalanches are LIKELY on steep, upper elevation slopes and may produce a slide breaking 2'-4' deep and hundreds of feet wide.
In addition, you'll encounter CONSIDERABLE avalanche hazard on the south half of the compass where recent winds whip up drifts sensitive to our additional weight. And while fresh drifts may seem more manageable and predictable, don't get let your guard down... even a small slide can take you for a body bruising ride in sustained steep terrain.
Mid elevation terrain offers MODERATE avalanche danger. Human triggered avalanches are POSSIBLE on steep, shady, wind sheltered slopes where you still might encounter a meaty slab that breaks to weaker layers buried in the mid portion of the snowpack.
So here's my exit strategy.... I'm finding quality riding, soft creamy snow, and generally LOW avy danger in wind sheltered, lower elevation terrain around the compass.
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