In partnership with: The Friends of the Utah Avalanche Forecast Center, Utah Department of
Public Safety Division of Comprehensive Emergency Management, Salt Lake County,
and Utah State Parks
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Good morning, this is Evelyn
Lees with the
Current Conditions:
Under cloudy skies, temperatures
are mild in the mountains this morning - already in the low 30’s. The southwesterly winds are averaging 15-20
mph with gusts near 30 along the exposed ridges.
Turning conditions are limited
to the higher elevations in most parts of the range. Above about 9,000’ there is some decent
settled powder on shady northerly facing slopes. Most other slopes and the lower elevations
are crusted early and late, and become damp with heating. Snowshoeing is a good choice for the current
conditions.
Avalanche Conditions:
While no new avalanches have
been reported for several days, our snow pits still indicate lingering
instabilities on the steep, shady slopes above about 9,000’. In these areas, last weekend’s storm landed
on the weak sugary October snow. As the dense
slabs above the old October snow become harder to trigger, skiers or riders may
be able to cross them multiple times or get further out onto the slab before
they release. Our friends in
Moderate winds should
continue today, so shallow drifts will develop along the exposed ridges, in
chutes and in open bowls. These new
drifts will be sitting on weak surface snow, and could crack and move with the
weight of a person on steep slopes.
Bottom Line:
The avalanche danger is MODERATE today above
about 9,000 feet on northeast, north and northwest facing slopes, approaching
35 degrees and steeper. Very dangerous
human triggered slides are possible in this terrain. It is also MODERATE on steep slopes with recent deposits of
wind drifted snow. On most other slopes
the avalanche danger is generally LOW.
Mountain Weather:
A weak Pacific weather
disturbance will move across northern
General Information:
For a complete list of evening
talks and multi-day classes, visit www.avalanche.org
and click on
To report backcountry snow
and avalanche conditions, especially if you observe or trigger an avalanche,
call (801) 524-5304 or 1-800-662-4140, or email to
Bruce Tremper will update this advisory by
Thanks for calling!
________________________________________________________________________
National
Weather Service - Salt Lake City - Snow.
For an explanation of
avalanche danger ratings: