Drifting by an overnight increase in winds from the northwest and west may have elevated the danger of shallow wind slab avalanches and cornice falls in exposed upper-elevation terrain. Also, with mountain temperatures this morning around 10°F warmer than yesterday's, the surface snow will probably become damp in sunny terrain during the day, and small wet avalanches may become possible.
Yesterday, riders found lingering dry snow in upper-elevation terrain and shallow, damp snow on a solid crust elsewhere.
The snow at lower elevations is melting pretty fast, with none or very little remaining on slopes facing southeast, south, southwest, and west. Despite this, access from the Logan Canyon Trailheads is still good (you ride on snow once you leave the parking areas), and snow coverage is excellent in upper and mid-elevation terrain.
***Rock-hard frozen cornice chunks and debris piles from last week's wet avalanche activity lurk beneath last weekend's snow on many steep upper-elevation slopes. If you unintentionally hit one of these hidden "death cookies," it could ruin your day.
The
Tony Grove Lake Snotel at 8400' reported 8 inches from the weekend storm. It's 32°F this morning, and there is 99 inches of total snow at the site, which contains 122% of normal snow water equivalent.
At the 9700'
CSI Logan Peak weather station, increasing winds are blowing from the northwest at 22 mph with gusts in the 30s, and it is 24°F.
At UAC's new
Paris Peak weather station at 9500', it's 22°F, and at 6:00, the wind is blowing from the west, also reading 22 mph with gusts in the 30s.
It's 26°F at UAC's new
Card Canyon weather station at 8800', and there is 85 inches of snow total.