Many thanks to YOU, our supporters and partners, Region 4 of the Forest Service, the Uinta-Wasatch-Cache National Forest, the Logan Ranger District, and the Friends of the Utah Avalanche Center, for making these advisories and the very existence of the Utah Avalanche Center in Logan possible.
As we're rapidly heading into spring, and with much of the snow and access to upper elevations now melted out, we're done posting regular advisories and overall danger ratings for the season. Stay tuned however, as we'll continue to update the Logan Zone Advisory intermittently through April, especially as snow and avalanche conditions change in the backcountry.
Special thanks to Buttar's of Tremonton and ArcticCat for hooking us up with the light and powerful M8000 for the all-too-short 2015 season.
We've stopped issuing regular advisories earlier than usual this year due to lack of snow in the backcountry. The Tony Grove Snotel at 8400' reports an inch of new snow overnight and 51 inches of total snow, containing 69% of average water content for the date, and it's 33 degrees this morning. It's 32 degrees at the UDOT Hwy 89 Summit weather station, with increasing west winds.....
No avalanches were recently reported in the Logan Zone, and it's been a relatively quite season in the backcountry, with only a handful of unintentionally triggered avalanches and no reported injuries.
****Check out our crowd-sourced avalanche information and recent backcountry observations from across the state.........HERE