Forecast for the Uintas Area Mountains

Issued by Craig Gordon on
Wednesday morning, February 12, 2020
Wednesday morning, February 12, 2020
In a sea of LOW avalanche danger, you could still trigger a slide that breaks deeper and wider than you might expect and here's what to look for-
While more the exception than the rule, in the wind zone, at and above treeline, pockets of MODERATE avalanche danger exist. Human triggered avalanches are POSSIBLE on steep, wind drifted slopes. Avalanches breaking into deeper, buried weak layers remains a distinct possibility. Usual suspects include- steep, rocky, upper elevation terrain, especially slopes exhibiting a thin, shallow snowpack. Remember- any slide that breaks to old snow, instantly throws a curve ball at your day.
Lose the wind and you lose the problem. Wind sheltered mid and low elevation terrain offers generally LOW avalanche danger.

Low
Moderate
Considerable
High
Extreme
Learn how to read the forecast here