The 5th Annual Avalanche Awareness Week is December 3-10. The week's goal is to save lives through activities that promote avalanche awareness, education, and safety. We have a variety of events around the state.
Find an event near you.
Know Before You Go - Tonight, December 6 - Utah State University, Logan. It’s Free! Please join us for a KBYG presentation hosted by Utah State University from 7:00 - 9:00 PM: Location: USU Aggie Recreation Center (ARC), 805 E 700 N, Logan, UT.
Significant drifting and very heavy snowfall occurred over the weekend, and dangerous conditions remain on slopes with underlying weak, sugary snow. Since temperatures increased toward the end of the storm and have been pretty warm in the last couple of days, the snow more closely resembles mashed potatoes than powder. Crusty surface conditions are found in sunny terrain and lower elevations, especially in the morning.
The Tony Grove Snotel at 8400' reports a total snow depth of 44 inches of settled snow, with well over 3' from the weekend storm, containing a whopping 6.6" SWE (snow water equivalent). It's 25 F this morning on Paris Peak, and the wind is blowing from the south-southwest around 15 mph, with gusts up to around 30 mph.
Today will be mostly sunny and warm. The 8500' high temperature will be around 39 F, and in the mid-40s at lower elevations in Logan Canyon. Snow is likely in the mountains, starting tonight and continuing into the weekend. Counted in inches rather than feet, accumulations will be relatively light compared to those from last weekend's storm. 5 to 9 inches could accumulate on upper-elevation slopes in the Bear River Range by Friday morning.
We observed numerous recent natural avalanches in the Central Bear River Range that occurred late on Sunday and overnight Monday. Clouds cleared over the Bear River Range high country yesterday morning, and several large natural avalanches, around 3 feet deep and several hundred feet wide, were seen from a distance
You can visit our
avalanche page to check out the reported avalanche activity from the Bear River Mountains and the Wasatch Range.