The snowpack remains very weak. We dug a snowpit near 8,300 feet on a northwest aspect of Sloth Ridge in Hell's Canyon, targeting areas with weak, higher-elevation snow. The snowpack was shallow overall, measuring just 116 cm. Much of the upper snowpack showed signs of weakening, and the bottom 30 cm were also notably weak. The grains near the bottom, which had recently been damp, are now very dry and unable to form a snowball.
The snow surface itself easily bounced off the crystal card, and we observed a few facet sluffs during the descent, highlighting how the cold weather has affected the snow surface.
In our stability tests, we were unable to produce results, which was generally expected. However, I would remain cautious in areas where the snowpack is even shallower and sits directly over the weak basal facets.
While this issue seems to be trending toward dormancy for now, the weak snow surface and intact facets near the ground will stay on our radar for any future loading events.
Pit profile - NW aspect -8300' Sloth Ridge
Hand hardness - Sloth Ridge - NW 8300'
ECTX - Sloth Ridge - NW 8300'