The Uinta's are white and the range got pounded by Monday's storm. Fortunately, we didn't experience the big, screaming, pre-frontal south winds usually accompanying a big storm and that's good news. While most areas across the range adjusted to the additional load, it's not a totally straightforward, no brainer kinda day, and there's two variables factoring into the avalanche hazard.
First, the sun is getting more intense and temperatures are expected to rise. As the new storm snow settles, it becomes more of a slab, and this change could help wake up some of the layers buried in the mid portion of our snowpack. Second, we've got a lot of terrain that avalanched during the Solstice storm and the snowpack is weak and shallow. Prime suspects are slopes facing North, Northeast, and East at mid and upper elevations.
In either case, once a slide is triggered, today's avalanches have the potential to break deeper than you might expect.
JG's pit brilliantly shows the weak sugary snow developing above and below the midpack crust. This is the layer where avalanches have the potential to break to the next couple days.