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Avalanche Advisory
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Advisory: Logan Area Mountains Issued by Toby Weed for January 2, 2013 - 6:51am
Above 8,500 ft.
7,000-8,500 ft.
5,000-7,000 ft.
bottom line

The snow is mostly stable and the overall danger is LOW (or level 1) in the backcountry today. Heightened avalanche conditions still exist in places, and there are areas with a MODERATE (or level 2) danger at upper elevations. You could trigger wind slab avalanches in drifted terrain or loose dry sluffs on very steep slopes. Although becoming rather unlikely, dangerous persistent slab avalanches are possible in areas with generally shallow and weak snow. Use normal caution and continue to practice safe travel protocols.




danger scale: 1. Low 2. Moderate 3. Considerable 4. High 5. Extreme
special announcement

The friends of the Utah Avalanche Center in Logan is presenting an Advanced Skills backcountry 201 class this week. A classroom session on the evening of January 3 and a field day on Saturday January 5. Here's a link for more information and registration; Advanced Skills, backcountry 201 or call 435-757-2794.

There will also be a snowmobile avalanche safety clinic in Logan, with a classroom session on Thursday.January 17 and a field session up at Tony Grove on Saturday January 19. Save the date, call 435-757-2794 for more information, and we'll have more registration information posted on our Website soon....

current conditions

You'll find good, fast, re-crystallized powder conditions today in many areas. But, some drifting occurred and is continuing in exposed terrain at upper elevations, even though the northerly winds still aren't all that strong. The Tony Grove Snotel at 8400' reports 8 degrees this morning, 45 inches of total snow, and 85% of average water content for the date. Wind information is rather limited this morning, but Beaver Mt. and UDOT hwy 89 Logan Summit are both showing wind speeds in the lower single digits... The fine powder from last week is settling out a bit and the surface is starting to re-crystallize, while frost or feathery surface hoar is also forming on the surface. You'll find a rather weak crumbly crust on south facing slopes.

recent activity

We've noticed evidence of natural avalanche activity in some areas that occurred during last week's storm. My party triggered a sizable loose dry sluff up in Deep Canyon in the Wellsville Mountain Wilderness on Monday. No avalanches were reported in the Logan Area yet in 2013...

Here's a link to our avalanche list...

Avalanche Problem 1over the next 24 hours
type aspect/elevation characteristics
Above 8,500 ft.
7,000-8,500 ft.
5,000-7,000 ft.
likelihood size
likely
unlikely
large
small
distribution trend
widespread
isolated
More Dangerous
Increasing
Less Dangerous
description

With all the light holiday powder around, it didn't take much wind to build shallow wind slabs on the lee side of major ridges and in and around terrain features like cliff bands, sub-ridges, gullies, and scoops. In some areas, stiffer wind slabs formed on steep exposed slopes. These may be stubborn and could allow you to get out on them before releasing.. Wind slabs could be found in some rather atypical places today and possible northeast winds at the highest elevations today could make this problem more of an issue.

Avalanche Problem 2over the next 24 hours
type aspect/elevation characteristics
Above 8,500 ft.
7,000-8,500 ft.
5,000-7,000 ft.
likelihood size
likely
unlikely
large
small
distribution trend
widespread
isolated
More Dangerous
Same
Less Dangerous
description

Triggered loose dry sluffs are still likely on very steep slopes with loose re-crystallized powder, and some of these could pick up energy and more snow in descent on longer slopes..

..

Avalanche Problem 3over the next 24 hours
type aspect/elevation characteristics
Above 8,500 ft.
7,000-8,500 ft.
5,000-7,000 ft.
likelihood size
likely
unlikely
large
small
distribution trend
widespread
isolated
More Dangerous
Same
Less Dangerous
description

Although becoming less of a threat with time, there are still pockets with poor snow structure where you might trigger dangerous hard slab avalanches releasing on buried persistent weak layers. Outlying steep slopes facing the northern half of the compass with generally shallow and weak snow are the most suspect. An avalanche of this type will probably take a pretty big trigger., and the weight of one person on a slope may not be enough, while two or three on sleds might be.... It'll take a bit of probing or digging to determine, but be wary if you find loose sugary snow in the basal layers. Avalanches running on persistent weak layers might be triggered remotely from a distance or worse, from below. Please report any audible collapsing or whumpfing you may encounter, as this is an important sign of persistent instability.

weather

Expect sunny conditions in the mountains today with high temperatures approaching 20 degrees and a light northwest breeze. Looks like a split pattern has developed and we are stuck in a period of weather controlled by a strong high pressure system. This means fair weather in the mountains and developing and thickening urban haze in the Cache and other northern Utah valleys at least through the weekend....

Check out the Logan Mountain Weather page...

general annoucements

Remember your information from the backcountry can save lives. If you see or trigger an avalanche in the backcountry or see anything else we should know about, please send us your snow and avalanche observations.   You can also call us at 801-524-5304 or email by clicking HERE.  In the Logan Area you can contact Toby Weed directly at 435-757-7578.

I will update this advisory on Monday, Wednesday, Friday, and Saturday mornings by around 7:30...

This advisory is produced by the U.S.D.A. Forest Service, which is solely responsible for its content. It describes only general avalanche conditions and local variations always exist. 

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