Tried to get this video that my buddy took of me skiing in No Name a day ago but I couldn't seem to upload it. It seems to me that it is a good representation of how fast the sluffs are running and how to avoid them by either skiing faster than their running or ski cut them and let them run first then ski. The snow is just going to get weaker in this high pressure and the sluffs might get bigger. This is the weakest surface snow I have seen in the past week. Slope is 38 degrees+ E, NE facing.
FORECASTER NOTE: This is a great example of how the weakening snow surface is behaving. Note not only the sluff chasing Mark but the other 'facet-lanches' that have run. This is a fairly widespread near surface faceting event that could prove to be a significant weak layer once it gets buried. Kobernik