Alta and Snowbird Mountain Resorts will be closed to Uphill Traffic today in preparation for their scheduled opening date. Please observe all closure signs at all resorts.
Welcome to the new look of the avalanche advisory. This past summer we had a series of meetings and negotiated a unified look-and-feel of the avalanche advisories and web pages for other avalanche centers in this region including Jackson, Wyoming, Sun Valley and the Sierra Avalanche Center. Eventually all these sites should look very similar and the plan is for Colorado to join the look next winter. In another week or two we expect to have two viewing choices for the advisory page--this basic view and the "advanced" view most are familiar with from last season with colored danger ratings in the aspect-elevation diagram.
We are still in the process of transferring the pages and content from our old website to the new site, so be patient. We are also tweaking the look and design so you may notice some changes. When everything is finished, it should all be pretty cool.
Instant winter! Snow continues to fall in the Ogden, Park City and Salt Lake mountains, which picked up another 2 to 5” overnight. A narrow lake affect band directed into Little Cottonwood, allowed Alta to pick up another 11 inches, and still counting. Storm totals are now approximately 9 to 11” in the Provo area mountains, up to 19” in the Ogden area mountains, 2 feet on the Park City side, and 2 to 3 feet in the Cottonwoods. Temperatures are in the single digits to low teens this morning. The northwesterly winds are generally averaging less than 15 mph, but have starting picking up along the higher ridges the past 2 hours. Along a few high, exposed ridges, winds speeds are edging up into the 20 to 30 mph range, with gusts to 40.
Two small slides were triggered yesterday on north facing slopes , above 9700', in upper Big Cottonwood. One was remotely triggered from about 75' away, by the 2nd person on the slope. Both failed on a shallow layer of 1-2mm facets on the ground. Check out the details in “All The Good Stuff” . There were also the more predictable natural and human triggered new snow soft slabs and sluffs, mostly triggered in upper Little Cottonwood during the periods of very heavy snowfall.