Introduction:
Good Morning, this is Dave Medara with the
To
check out past advisories, go to ARCHIVE. To check out the current, go to our WEATHER page.
Current
Conditions:
We now have 43 of snow at the
Miller Flat trailhead with decent coverage on most slopes for snowmobiling,
skiing and boarding out there. Good powder conditions can be found on the shady
side slopes, East Northeast Northwest facing. Expect to find varying
degrees of sun and wind crusts on the sunnier slopes as a result of the strong
winds earlier this week and the warm, sunny days that have followed. The forecast 20 30 mph west winds should
make the kite skiing pretty good as well. Road are plowed and clear. Please park as
efficiently as possible along the skyline and leave room for everybody.
Click the links below to find out
up to date information at these weather stations on the Skyline.
Mammoth/Cottonwood SNOTEL
(8,800): 40 of snow on the ground.
Seeley Creek SNOTEL (10,000):
There is 26 of snow on the ground.
There is about 43 of snow on the ground at the Miller Flat Trailhead.
Mountain
Weather:
Today...Partly cloudy in the morning then becoming mostly cloudy.
Windy. Highs at 8000 feet in the mid 40s. West winds 20-30 mph.
Tonight...A chance of
snow in the evening...Then snow likely after
Sunday...Windy...Periods
of snow...Colder. Accumulation 1-3 inches. Highs at 8000 feet around 30.
Northwest winds 20-30 mph.
Avalanche Conditions:
(Click here for the International
Avalanche Danger Scale)
The warm weather this week and the passage of time, allowing
the snowpack to adjust to the load of snow from last weekend; will have stabilized
the snowpack quite a bit. There are still some weak snowpack structures out
there, particularly on E-NE-NW facing slopes that dont see as much sun, and
tend to get larger snow loads piled up on them. Buried faceted crystals on
these slopes, approximately 30 35 inches down in the snowpack, could fail
with dramatic results. This danger is not widespread, but it is worth noting
before you hit the slopes today. The BOTTOM
LINE is a MODERATE avalanche hazard on East
Northeast Northwest facing slopes steeper than 35 degrees today. Expect to
find a LOW hazard elsewhere in the range. Be careful on
steep shady slopes out there today and practice safe travel techniques. Carry
an Avalanche Beacon, shovel and probe and know how to use them. If you dont
know or want to know more then wed like to invite you to attend a Basic
Avalanche Awareness and Field Day starting at the Carbon County Recreation
Center, Price, Utah. 7 p.m. at the Rec Center on Friday evening January 20th,
with a Field day Saturday on the Skyline January 21st, 2006.
Basic Avalanche Awareness and Field Day
Carbon County Recreation Center, Price, Utah
7 p.m. at t Center (Friday), Field day Saturday on the Skyline
*The
advisory is also available via recorded message at (800) 648-7433