Skies are mostly cloudy in advance of a storm-in-name-only pushing through this afternoon. The mountains may see a lost snowflake or two from a system passing by to the north. Winds picked up from the south overnight, blowing 15-20mph with gusts to 30. The most exposed anemometers have hourly averages of 25-30mph with gusts to 50. Temperatures are in the low to mid-20s.
Riding conditions are excellent, although sun and wind damage exists in exposed terrain.
For today, we'll have mostly cloudy to overcast skies, temps in the mid to upper 20s, and moderate to strong winds from the southwest. Looking ahead, a one-two punch storm system moves through Monday afternoon through later Wednesday. The first punch brings wet, warm, and windy followed by a colder secondary wave Tuesday night into Wednesday. This may all add up to an additional 1-2" of SWE and 12-18" of snow. The Provo mountains will again be initially favored.
Clearing follows for Wednesday night through Saturday...with more storms to follow.
The state sits WAY above average for precipitation for this time of year and coverage is fantastic, with 50" at the trailheads and 85-125" up high.
While more reports filtered in of the widespread natural avalanche cycle from Friday, we did not hear of any avalanches in the backcountry yesterday.
Some (photo 1- Hanging Snowfield, PC ridgeline) of Friday's natural avalanches failed within the new snow 1-2' deep, some of them stepped down into the older November PWL faceted layers 5-8' deep (photo 2 - White Baldy, LCC).
pc: J Dunford
pc: C. Norris