Avalanche Advisory
Advisory: Salt Lake Area Mountains Issued by Drew Hardesty for Monday - March 20, 2017 - 5:35am
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The danger for wet activity will rise to at least MODERATE today. Natural and human triggered wet avalanches are likely on a variety of aspects and elevations. The best and safest conditions are on smooth, undisturbed low angle slopes. Cornices remain significant objective hazards and glide avalanches should be expected in typical terrain.




special announcement

Spring Special: We have a few donated Snowbasin discount lift tickets left and have just lowered the price. Ski a day and benefit the Utah Avalanche Center! Order here.

current conditions

Happy Equinox. In case you didn't know it, we started spring a couple weeks ago.

Skies are mostly cloudy. Winds are southwesterly, blowing 15mph with gusts to 25. Temperatures are in the upper 30s to low 40s.

recent activity

Already this morning: Some natural wet sluffs were reported at 530am this morning in steep south facing terrain above Little Cottonwood Canyon.

Activity yesterday centered on three main issues:

  • Human triggered minor wet sluffs or "push-a-lanches" in steep terrain.
  • Natural and human triggered cornice fall with an apparently very close call in the Logan area mountains. Check the Logan advisory for details.
  • Large glide avalanche release yesterday in Stairs Gulch of Big Cottonwood Canyon at roughly 9500' west facing. 3-6' deep and 200' wide, running 1000' vertical. (On the issue of glide releases, more roof-alanches were reported in the upper Big Cottonwood Brighton circle.)

(Natural cornice fall in Brighton periphery from early Sunday morning, credit: Achelis)

Avalanche Problem 1
type aspect/elevation characteristics
LIKELIHOOD
LIKELY
UNLIKELY
SIZE
LARGE
SMALL
TREND
INCREASING DANGER
SAME
DECREASING DANGER
over the next 14 hours
description

A thin blanket of overnight clouds and continued warm temperatures will keep wet point release sluffs high on the avalanche problem list for today. Sure, they don't have the speed of their dry cousins, but they more than make up for it with sheer mass, volume, and pound-for-pound, destructive potential. Wet loose sluffs can be triggered today on all aspects and elevations except the highest, northerly facing slopes. Keep an eye on the snow surface, when it becomes damp, punchy, and unsupportable - it's time to leave or move to low angle slopes.

The outlier: this is highly variable, but free water pooling above the any number of crusts, especially the February rain crusts, may produce wet slab activity in steep terrain. Control work two days ago in the Ogden mountains produced a 3' deep wet slab in unsupported terrain.

For more thoughts on wet activity, check out yesterday's observation from Summit Park.

Avalanche Problem 2
type aspect/elevation characteristics
LIKELIHOOD
LIKELY
UNLIKELY
SIZE
LARGE
SMALL
TREND
INCREASING DANGER
SAME
DECREASING DANGER
over the next 14 hours
description

It's calving season. More and more cornices are calving off the ridgelines, leaving enormous piles of snow in the runout zones. We've had a few very close calls recently with cornices. Stay well back from the ridgelines and run-don't-walk if moving in terrain beneath the giant whales.

Avalanche Problem 3
type aspect/elevation characteristics
LIKELIHOOD
LIKELY
UNLIKELY
SIZE
LARGE
SMALL
TREND
INCREASING DANGER
SAME
DECREASING DANGER
over the next 24 hours
description

Glide cracks are opening throughout the range and occur primarily where there are smooth rock slabs beneath the snow. Common locations include Broads Fork, Stairs Gulch and Mill B South in Big Cottonwood Canyon, and the Raymond Slabs in Porter Fork of Mill Creek Canyon. Appropriate risk-management strategies include avoiding all terrain with glide cracks or recent glide releases and giving runout zones a wide berth. The old Hanscom/Kelner Wasatch Tours guidebooks warn that Stairs Gulch should never be entered in winter. I'd say that's appropriate advice for the current conditions.

For photos from a recent tour into Broads and Mill B South, click here.

weather

We'll have mostly cloudy skies, moderate southwest winds, and daytime highs reaching into the low 40s along the ridgelines and to near 60°F at 8500'. Some convective showers with lightning is possible this afternoon. A warm and windy storm on a southerly flow will embrace the state Wednesday evening into Thursday. A foot of snow may be expected in the higher elevations with a rain/snow line perhaps initially at 8000'...dropping to 7000' by Thursday as the flow shifts from southerly to west/northwest. We get a quick break Friday ahead of the next system on Saturday.

general announcements

Remember your information can save lives. If you see anything we should know about, please help us out by submitting snow and avalanche conditions. You can also call us at 801-524-5304, email by clicking HERE, or include #utavy in your tweet or Instagram.

To get help in an emergency (to request a rescue) in the Wasatch, call 911. Be prepared to give your GPS coordinates or the run name. Dispatchers have a copy of the Wasatch Backcountry Ski map.

Backcountry Emergencies. It outlines your step-by-step method in the event of a winter backcountry incident.

If you trigger an avalanche in the backcountry, but no one is hurt and you do not need assistance, please notify the nearest ski area dispatch to avoid a needless response by rescue teams. Thanks.

EMAIL ADVISORY If you would like to get the daily advisory by email you will need to subscribe here.

DAWN PATROL Hotline updated daily by 5-530am - 888-999-4019 option 8.

TWITTER Updates for your mobile phone - DETAILS

UDOT canyon closures: LINK TO UDOT, or on Twitter, follow @UDOTavy, @CanyonAlerts or @AltaCentral

Utah Avalanche Center mobile app - Get your advisory on your iPhone along with great navigation and rescue tools.

Powderbird Helicopter Skiing - Blog/itinerary for the day

Lost or Found something in the backcountry? - http://nolofo.com/

Ski Utah mobile snow updates

To those skinning uphill at resorts: it is critical to know the resort policy on uphill travel. You can see the uphill travel policy for each resort here.

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This information does not apply to developed ski areas or highways where avalanche control is normally done. This advisory is from the U.S.D.A. Forest Service, which is solely responsible for its content. This advisory describes general avalanche conditions and local variations always occur.