Avalanche Advisory
Advisory: Uintas Area Mountains Issued by Craig Gordon for Monday - January 16, 2017 - 3:25am
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In the wind zone, at and above treeline a MODERATE avalanche danger exists. Fresh wind slabs will be reactive to our additional weight and human triggered avalanches are POSSIBLE on steep, wind drifted slopes, especially those on the leeward side of upper elevation ridges. While making up a small portion of the terrain available to ride in today, any avalanche that breaks to weaker snow, now buried deep in the snowpack will get out of hand quickly, resulting in a dangerous slide.

Wind sheltered mid and lower elevation terrain offers green light conditions and in general, a LOW avalanche danger.




current conditions

As valley muck grows thicker, the place to be is in the mountains where the air is clear and the breathin' easy. Currently, skies are clear and temperatures in the low to mid teens. For the past few days there hasn't been a breath of wind, but early this morning, north and northeast winds bumped into the teens and low 20's along the high ridges. It's a holiday weekend and most of the popular riding areas got loved to death yesterday, so you'll have to think a little out of the box. But with a little cerebral weight lifting, you'll be rewarded with five star riding and turning conditions.

PHAT... Mark was at 10,100 feet, on a north aspect and found the snow depth was over 2.5 meters (over 8 ft) deep. He commented, "coverage in the Uinta Mountains is unbelievable."

Of course, today's loud pow might eventually become a player in our snowpack if it gets preserved and buried. Something to keep an eye on later this week as weather turns more stormy.

Additional snowpack observations and trip reports are found here.


Clearly illustrated in the image above is the uptick in winds on Lofty Lake Peak.

Real time wind, snow, and temperatures for the Uinta's are found here

recent activity

Not a huge slope by Uinta standards, but a couple riders were able to trigger an avalanche on this slope near Strawberry on Saturday, which broke to weak snow near the ground. One rider was partially buried and his sled completely buried. Fortunately, no ne is injured and all is good at the end of the day.

A full list of recent Uinta avalanche activity is found here.

Avalanche Problem 1
type aspect/elevation characteristics
LIKELIHOOD
LIKELY
UNLIKELY
SIZE
LARGE
SMALL
TREND
INCREASING DANGER
SAME
DECREASING DANGER
over the next 24 hours
description

There's plenty of light density snow available to blow around and this mornings northeast winds will have no problem creating fresh drifts, sensitive to our additional weight. Found mostly near and along the leeward side of upper elevation ridges, I bet there's a pocket or two that formed around a terrain feature like a chute or gully wall. In any case, today's shallow slabs will predictably break at or below our skis, boards, or sleds.

Avalanche Problem 2
type aspect/elevation characteristics
LIKELIHOOD
LIKELY
UNLIKELY
SIZE
LARGE
SMALL
TREND
INCREASING DANGER
SAME
DECREASING DANGER
over the next 24 hours
description

Not as predictable and certainly less manageable is any avalanche that breaks to weaker snow, now buried several feet deep in the mid portion of our snowpack. The good news is... time, settlement, and snowpit tests all indicate the pack is healing and much of our terrain offers a deep, strong snowpack. However, the Uinta's are a big range and I'm not entirely convinced there isn't a rogue slope or two that's just waiting for us to come along and knock the legs out from underneath it. Remember- all we need to do is find a weaknesses in the slab, collapse that slope, and now we're staring down the barrel of a very dangerous avalanche. It doesn't mean you can't get after it. It does mean that if you're charging hard today, think about the consequences of triggering a slide. Have a solid game plan and exit strategy in place and make sure to communicate that with your partners.

weather

High pressure is firmly entrenched over the region and that'll give us sunny skies with temperatures warming into the low 30's. Northerly winds blow in the teens and low 20's with a gust or two in the 30's along the high peaks. A warming trend is forecast into mid week with an active weather pattern returning for the latter half of the week.

general announcements

Remember your information can save lives. If you see anything we should know about, please participate in the creation of our own community avalanche advisory by submitting snow and avalanche conditions. You can call me directly at 801-231-2170, email [email protected]

The information in this advisory is from the US Forest Service which is solely responsible for its content. This advisory describes general avalanche conditions and local variations always occur.

The information in this advisory expires 24 hours after the date and time posted, but will be updated by 7:00 AM on Tuesday January 17th.