Check out our Holiday Auction - Sign Up for the Utah Snow and Avalanche Workshop (USAW)

Observation: North Ogden Divide

Observation Date
11/17/2024
Observer Name
Champion & Talty
Region
Ogden » North Ogden Divide
Location Name or Route
North Ogden Divide
Weather
Sky
Scattered
Precipitation
Light Snowfall
Wind Direction
Southwest
Wind Speed
Moderate
Weather Comments
Light snowfall and broken skies in the morning. As we started up the Skyline Trail, the ridge was in and out of the cloud deck, with blue skies visible in the distance. The cloud deck rose throughout the day, with occasional very light snowfall. Winds stayed west-southwesterly, with moderate gusts along the ridgeline during the day.
Snow Characteristics
New Snow Depth
4"
Snow Characteristics Comments
Overall, the snowpack was thin and highly variable, so we opted to walk in boots instead of using skis. Snow depths ranged from bare dirt on southerly slopes to about 10 inches on shaded northerly slopes, with an average of 4–8 inches above 7,000 feet. On southerly aspects, the snow from 11/16 fell directly onto bare ground in most areas. On northerly slopes above 7,000 feet, it landed on 1–2 inches of faceted snow, often capped with a melt-freeze crust.
Snow Profile
Elevation
8,100'
Comments
Headed out to get a sense of snow coverage across the range and along the Skyline Trail toward Ben Lomond above the North Divide. With the recent snowfall yesterday, we wanted to see what the snow fell on. In the Ogden area, many upper-elevation northerly slopes still held some early-season snow from previous storms, while most south-facing slopes and terrain below 7,000 feet had melted back to dirt. The lingering snow in upper-elevation terrain wasn’t widespread or deep but was already showing signs of faceting.
In our "snow pits", we found 2–5 inches of faceting grains near the ground, topped by a 1 cm melt-freeze crust. Above the crust, the storm began with graupel transitioning to stellars. In many areas, the graupel remained well-preserved on top of the melt-freeze or rain crust.
As we move into another period of high pressure, I’d expect the 4–9 inches of snow from 11/16 to continue weakening and faceting in much of the bigger terrain. While you might find a few spots where you could skin around, trail runners are likely still your best bet until we get better coverage.
Photo 1 & 2: Initial holes on a N aspect at 7000'. The melt-freeze rain crust was not very obvious in this hole.
Photo 3 & 4: Secondary hole at 7200' on a true north aspect. The melt-freeze crust was more obvious.
General coverage photos:
Trail conditions:
Today's Observed Danger Rating
None
Tomorrows Estimated Danger Rating
None
Coordinates