Surface Hoar, Natural Avalanches Cooke City

Surface Hoar, Natural Avalanches Cooke City

Date
Activity
Snowmobiling

We rode up to Daisy Pass to Wolverine Pass then out Lulu Pass. There was 1.5-2’ of fresh snow. There were several natural new snow avalanches on all aspects. We rode past Scotch Bonnet and saw more naturals. The slide on Scotch Bonnet was R2 D2, broke 2 feet deep, and ran 4-500 feet vertical, 100 feet wide. We dug a pit to the east of the wilderness boundary. On the N aspect at 9,100’ there was ~6.5’ feet of snow (210 cm). The 18” of new snow had 1” of SWE.  We found a layer of buried surface hoar in the top half of the snowpack. We got an ECTP 13 on that layer of surface hoar (4.0 mm) 1.5’ below the surface, and we got an ECTP 19 on a layer of 1.0 mm facets 2.5’ below the surface. The surface hoar is the biggest concern moving forward, and it will take longer for the snowpack to adjust to this new snow since it's sitting atop persistent weak layers. We avoided avalanche terrain today.

Region
Cooke City
Location (from list)
COOKE CITY
Observer Name
Dave Zinn, Alex Haddad