We found surprisingly good powder riding conditions at higher elevations with colder temperatures, especially in shady terrain. The sun popped out in the afternoon, and clouds caused greenhousing to occur. The warm temperatures had a detrimental effect on the snow, dampening the powder and causing widespread swams of roller balls and loose surface sluffs. Both human-triggered and natural avalanches of storm snow are possible on slopes steeper than 30° at all elevations. Soft slab avalanches are most likely in wind-affected terrain, and small natural loose avalanches are likely on very steep slopes at all elevations. In some places, loose avalanches overrunning a slope with significant new snow accumulation could trigger a more dangerous soft slab avalanche.
Heavy snowfall is visible on
Beaver's webcams. The Tony Grove Snotel at 8400' reports 5 inches of new snow with .6" SWE (snow water equivalent) from early this morning. It's currently 26° F, and there is 105" of total snow (121% of normal). The wind is blowing from the south this morning around 15 mph with gusts in the 30's mph at the 9700' CSI Logan Peak weather station. At 9500' on Paris Peak, winds are generally light and variable, currently blowing from the northeast around 8 mph, and it's 19° F.
Snow could be heavy at times today, especially at upper elevations, with 4 to 8 inches of accumulation possible. The winds will blow from the west-northwest 9 to 13 mph. High temperatures at 8500' are expected to be around freezing, but will be closer to 40° F down in Logan Canyon. Tonight will be mostly cloudy and 1 to 3 inches of additional accumulation is possible, with upper-elevation temperatures falling to around 18° F.
Tomorrow will be partly sunny with high temperatures up high around 30° F.
It looks like fair weather through the upcoming weekend, with the next storm impacting the zone beginning on Monday.
Yesterday in the Logan zone, there were numerous small natural avalanches of moist storm snow. Most of these were small loose avalanches, with a few shallow soft slab avalanches triggered by overrunning loose avalanches also observed. Extensive roller-ball swams, small loose wet avalanches, and a few larger natural soft or perhaps wet slab avalanches in the Mt Naomi Wilderness were spotted from the valley yesterday evening.
see the report
Check out all local observations and avalanches
HERE.