Northern Madison

Whumps/Collapses in Beehive on a saturated snowpack

Date
Activity
Skiing

When setting out to Beehive Basin today we only imagined wanting to bail if rain line was at the trailhead, but had not expected our seasons long standing PWL to turn us around. With a few inches of snow at the trailhead and temps just at freezing we set out. The new snow yesterday/last night capped a warm snowpack, keeping the snowpack from freezing at all (no crusts or other signs of superficial freezes up to 9,200ft where we bailed despite the mid-20’s temps recorded overnight). Almost immediately out of the trailhead we got thunderous collapses so big we at first thought it was noise from control work at Big Sky. Further along we got collapses extending hundreds of feet out, valley wide and echoing up the basin. We dug to the bottom out of curiosity and found a saturated and unfrozen snowpack. The bottom 30cm was still all facets, giving the appearance that the remaining 90-110cm of consolidated snowpack was floating on air. We’re assuming the whumps/collapses are traveling along this layer of basal facets.

Region
Northern Madison
Location (from list)
Beehive Basin
Observer Name
Christopher Kussmaul

Loose Snow avalanches in Beehive and Bear Basins

Beehive Basin
Northern Madison
Code
L-AS
Aspect Range
W-E
Latitude
45.34770
Longitude
-111.38900
Notes

From obs: "We saw several loose avalanches on WSW, ESE & SSE aspects of the ridge between beehive and bear basin.  The one on the ESE slope may have been skier triggered (by another group) and the rest appeared to be natural.  We found a strong crust beneath the foot of new snow throughout our route.  We didn't see any cracks or whumphs, and the new snow wasn't reactive in hand pits.  The snow surface was getting wet as we exited to the beehive trailhead around 3pm."

Number caught
0
Number buried
0
Avalanche Type
Loose-snow avalanche
Trigger
Skier
Slab Thickness units
centimeters
Single / Multiple / Red Flag
Multiple Avalanches
Advisory Year

Wet loose avalanches in Beehive and Bear Basins

Date
Activity
Skiing

We saw several loose avalanches on WSW, ESE & SSE aspects of the ridge between beehive and bear basin.  The one on the ESE slope may have been skier triggered (by another group) and the rest appeared to be natural.  We found a strong crust beneath the foot of new snow throughout our route.  We didn't see any cracks or whumphs, and the new snow wasn't reactive in hand pits.  The snow surface was getting wet as we exited to the beehive trailhead around 3pm.

Region
Northern Madison
Location (from list)
Beehive Basin

Remote trigger in little bear

Date
Activity
Snowmobiling

From IG message 4/17/24: "Remote trigger up little bear today. Went to the groundish."

Region
Northern Gallatin
Location (from list)
NORTHERN GALLATIN RANGE
Observer Name
Loren Griswold

A group remotely triggered a wet slab avalanche from the ridge top. There were shooting cracks that connected their location to the avalanche. This is an interesting of persistent weak layer and wet snow avalanche problems. Photo: M Harry 

Northern Madison, 2024-04-15

Remotely triggered wet slab Taylor Fork

Date
Activity
Snowmobiling

From IG: A group of riders noted very wet snow west of Cabin Creek and Southwest of the Taylor Fork. They were sinking to the ground where it was unconsolidated. The group remotely triggered a wet slab avalanche from the ridge top. There were shooting cracks that connected their location to the avalanche. This is an interesting of persistent weak layer and wet snow avalanche problems. 

Region
Southern Madison
Location (from list)
Taylor Fork
Observer Name
Marcus Harry

Wet Slab Avalanche Above Quake Lake

Quake Lake
Southern Madison
Code
WS-N-R2-D2-G
Latitude
44.85240
Longitude
-111.39200
Notes

From IG: Wet slide to the ground above Quake Lake. 

Number of slides
1
Number caught
0
Number buried
0
Avalanche Type
Wet slab avalanche
Trigger
Natural trigger
R size
2
D size
2
Bed Surface
G - Ground
Problem Type
Wet Snow
Vertical Fall
300ft
Slab Width
150.00ft
Snow Observation Source
Slab Thickness units
centimeters
Single / Multiple / Red Flag
Single Avalanche
Advisory Year