Looks like the Wasatch is the sucker hole these days. Only real thing of note is the high shady north facing terrain above 10,000ft, it was holding a little old snow and now there's 5 to 7 inches of fairly light density connected snow sitting in the starting zones of the high north facing slide paths and if it anything like most years the shallow light density snow is going to rot out and facet quickly with some cold clear nights, leaving booby traps where people tend to go first in the early season because of the preexisting snow. This problem will not be widespread, it will be spotty but its something I will keep in the back of my mind after the next storm, all other aspects were dirt before the storm and I think most of it will melt out. Guess I'll wait until its supposed to snow again and check the rate of faceting on the high north before the next snowfall.
Photos: coverage in the high shady N starting zones, Little Superior Buttress, Hand pit showing depth and our first dirt layer on the high shady N