Forecast for the Uintas Area Mountains
Issued by Craig Gordon on
Friday morning, January 12, 2024
Friday morning, January 12, 2024
This is the real-deal... the snowpack is super sketchy and the setup is nothing to mess around with-
Recent winds coupled with heavy snow deliver a one-two punch and the avy danger is HIGH. Both human triggered and natural avalanches are VERY LIKELY, particularly in steep, leeward terrain above treeline, and especially in the wind zone on slopes with an easterly component to its aspect. Any avalanche triggered has the potential to break deeper and wider than you might expect... it'll pack a powerful, season ending punch.
Wind penetrated mid and low elevation terrain where you'll find CONSIDERABLE avalanche danger. Human triggered avalanches are LIKELY on steep wind drifted slopes.
MODERATE avalanche danger exists on south aspects near lower elevation trailheads where fresh storm snow reacts to our additional weight and human triggered avalanches are POSSIBLE.
Here's your exit strategy-
I know you're looking for a place to ride, but it's time to really rein it in. Big, open, low elevation meadows with NO overhead hazard (no steep slopes above or adjacent to where you're riding) are the ticket. Remember, the snowpack is in its infancy and it's still lean with no shortage of equipment trashing rocks and stumps barely lurking underneath a thin coat of white paint.
Learn how to read the forecast here