Observation: Red Pine

Observation Date
11/24/2025
Observer Name
Maushund
Region
Salt Lake » Little Cottonwood Canyon » Red Pine
Location Name or Route
Red Pine Avalanche
Weather
Sky
Clear
Wind Direction
Northwest
Wind Speed
Light
Weather Comments
Another sunny, cold, and clear day of extended fall in the Wasatch. Winds were calm, but picked up to moderate WNW after 14:30, as broken cloud cover moved down across the Cottonwoods. Temps were well below freezing throughout the day, clocking in at 18°F at 10,300'—chilly.
Snow Characteristics
New Snow Depth
18"
New Snow Density
Low
Snow Surface Conditions
Faceted Loose
Snow Characteristics Comments

Heading up to the Red Pine drainage, consistent snow coverage started at 8800', with 2-4" of unconsolidated, faceted snow-covered the ground in most areas until 9500'. Sun-exposed areas had a thin, eggshell-like melt-freeze crust on the surface below this elevation. Our cold temps have made for some entertaining "ice bulge cruxes", or frozen creek flows, on the trail heading up to Red Pine Lake. As I made my way higher into the Red Pine Basin, past the lower main Red Pine Lake, HS increased to 10-12" on northerly aspects around 10,100', with max HS hitting 18" in spots above 10,300'. The snow surface was a mix of near surface facets in more wind-exposed terrain, with 2-4mm surface hoar remaining in the trees.

Red Flags
Red Flags
Recent Avalanches
Poor Snowpack Structure
Red Flags Comments
The takeaway is that slab avalanches are on the menu in high, northerly, wind-loaded alpine terrain—especially near rocks, and on the leeward sides of ridges. Recent reports of avalanches in the Cottonwoods mostly have been facet-lanches: weak, loose snow moving downhill with no structure. However, this wind-drifted snow avalanche that propagated after likely being triggered by a rider shows us that while these are more the exception than the rule right now, they are possible in just the right, or wrong, places. As we head into this next storm system, keeping events like these on the forefront of the mind will help to dial back early-season powder fever. We've all been waiting for winter to arrive, but I'll be thinking about this snowboarder's experience heading into next week.
Comments

This likely snowboarder-triggered avalanche on a NE aspect near 10,600' was ~13" deep, ~150' wide, and ran about 200 vertical feet. 4-6" of dry, wind-packed snow initially was triggerd and stepped down to the 8-10" of the weak faceted grains that make up the majority of the snowpack in this basin. While there are various, thin melt-freeze crusts mixed in from our warmer periods earlier this month, the snowpack is made up of a majority of FCs of various sizes. A huge thanks to our public observer Christoph who let us know about this avalanche on his hike up the Pfiefferhorn the day prior (see his ob here).

General coverage photos in the Red Pine drainage.

*Our platform is experiencing some technical struggles after an update and is not supporting many file uploads. This ob will be updated with a SnowPilot crown profile as soon as possible*

Today's Observed Danger Rating
Low
Tomorrows Estimated Danger Rating
Low