Join the Utah Avalanche Center and the Division of Outdoor Recreation to celebrate the Fourth Annual Avalanche Awareness week, from December 4 - December 11. Click
HERE to view the full list of events for the week.
Skies are mostly cloudy ahead of the first in a series of storm systems for the Wasatch.
Mountain temperatures have been slightly warming over the past several hours and are in the low to mid-20s. Winds are out of the west-southwest, blowing 20-30mph with gusts to 40. The highest elevations have hourly averages of 35-40mph with gusts to 60.
A cold Pacific storm is on the doorstep and we'll see light snowfall through much of the day. Snowfall intensity will spike during and just after the arrival of the cold front, estimated to arrive during the afternoon commute. Winds will veer to the west northwest and be gusty for a few hours into the evening. By early evening, favored locations could see upwards of 5-8", with snowfall continuing through the night and into Tuesday. Lake effect is possible, though the flow may favor areas north of I-80. By later Tuesday, the Ogden and Salt Lake mountains should see storm totals of 10-16" or more, with temperatures plummeting to the low single digits.
A warming trend follows for mid-week with the next storm slated for Thursday evening.
Snow depths are 3-4' in the upper reaches of the Cottonwoods and 2-3' along the Park City ridgeline. Ogden snow depths are 2-3' and the Provo area mountains have 1-2' of snow on the ground.
From Ogden to the central Wasatch to the Provo mountains, we have received several excellent observations. You can find them
HERE. Please keep these reports coming.
None. We did hear of one skier-triggered soft slab of wind drifted snow in upper Little Cottonwood 1-2' deep on Thanksgiving Day, but the mountains have been silent for days.