Forecast for the Uintas Area Mountains
Issued by Craig Gordon on
Saturday morning, December 9, 2023
Saturday morning, December 9, 2023
Heads up... the recent storm thumped our snowpack and avalanche danger is deceptively tricky-
Yesterdays big storm delivered a one-two punch... an abundance of fresh snow, coupled with strong winds. The snowpack is reeling, it's on the ropes, and we need to be patient and give the pack some time to adjust.
CONSIDERABLE avalanche danger exists and human triggered avalanches are LIKELY, especially in the windzone at and above treeline. Avoid steep, upper elevation, leeward, wind drifted slopes... particularly those facing the north half of the compass. Know that any avalanche initiated in the new storm snow or fresh wind drift could easily break to weaker layers in the snowpack producing an avalanche that instantly gets out of hand.
It's a little more straight forward as you lose elevation but don't get complacent and let your guard down. MODERATE avalanche danger is found on mid elevation shady slopes and human triggered avalanches are POSSIBLE in steep, wind drifted terrain.
Your exit strategy-
Lower elevation slopes facing the south half of the compass harbor no old snow and you'll find generally LOW avalanche danger.
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