In partnership with: Utah Division of State
Parks and Recreation, The Friends of the Utah Avalanche Center, Utah Department
of Emergency Services and Homeland Security and
AVALANCHE ADVISORY
Saturday,
February 18, 2006 7:30am
Good morning, this is Drew Hardesty with
the
A long time fundraiser for the
Current Conditions:
Skies are partly to mostly cloudy with
chilly single digit temperatures at most mountain locations. The southerly winds picked up overnight and
are blowing 20-35mph along the upper elevations. Most shady sheltered slopes have excellent
riding conditions. Many upper elevation
areas have some wind damage and many due south slopes are now crusted.
Avalanche Conditions:
The
The central Wasatch ran the gamut of
avalanche activity, from long running sluffs to shallow pockety wind drifts, a
skier triggered hard slab, and even a glide avalanche in upper Stairs Gulch. The only slide of note, however, was the
slide in the East Bowl of Silver Fork, where a skier triggered a hard slab 1’
deep and 60’ wide that broke about 10’ above him. The others were mostly harmless except where
consequences would have played a role.
With plenty of snow to blow around, today’s
moderate winds will likely drift the snow into sensitive shallow slabs on the
northerly through east facing slopes in the higher terrain. In the absence of wind or temperature effects,
shady slopes will support some sluffing in the new snow.
Bottom Line:
A MODERATE danger exists on steep upper
elevation terrain with new and old wind drifts.
Human triggered slab avalanches
are possible. Terrain down off of the
ridgelines has a mostly LOW danger.
Mountain Weather:
With the
next set of Pacific storms on the doorstep, we’ll see increasing clouds and stronger
southerly winds. Light snowfall will
begin about midday and we’ll see periods of snow over the next 24 hours that
may add up to 6-12”. The southwesterly
winds will average 25-30 mph until about noon, when they’ll drop to 15-20mph. 8000’ highs will reach the mid-teens with
10,000’ temps about 10 degrees.
Announcements:
Click here to check out our new online avalanche
encyclopedia.
Early birds and snow
geeks can catch our 6AM report at 364-1591.
Click HERE for a text only version of the avalanche advisory.
To
have this advisory automatically e-mailed to you each day, click HERE.
UDOT also has a highway avalanche control work
hotline for Big Cottonwood, Little Cottonwood, and
Wasatch
Powderbird Guides flew in
Please
report any backcountry snow and avalanche conditions. Call (801) 524-5304 or 1-800-662-4140, email [email protected] or fax 801-524-6301. The information in this advisory is from the
U.S. Forest Service, which is solely responsible for its content. This advisory describes general avalanche
conditions and local variations always occur.
Brett Kobernik will update this advisory by 7:30 Sunday morning. Thanks for calling.