Cooke City

Ride around north of Cooke

Date
Activity
Snowmobiling

We saw most terrain in the motorized area north of Cooke City. We went passed Round Lake to Goose Lake wilderness boundary, around the north of Sheep Mtn. and Scotch Bonnet to Lulu Pass, out to Mt. Abundance, back south over Daisy Pass, and around town hill/Miller Rd., then up and down Sheep Creek to the top.

Skies were clear and wind was calm to non-existent with cold temperatures (singles to teens F).

We saw a handful (4-6?) of old wind slab avalanches of various ages. The most recent and largest appearing, but still not very fresh, was on the north side of Scotch Bonnet (attached photo). Most were D1-D1.5, the slide pictured was D2. 

We dug on the southeast shoulder of Mt. Abundance (profile attached). Snow depth was 3.5-4 feet and we had ECTNs. There were some soft-ish facets near the bottom of the snowpack. We also dug a pit in Sheep Creek and had an ECTX, snow depth of 4-5 feet. We did a lot of hand pits to look for recently buried facets. Small sugary facets were generally easy to find, buried 3-6" deep below soft snow. If and where snow is drifted into thicker slabs, these facets might make those slabs more reactive.

A lack of recent avalanches combined with minimal recent loading from new snow and wind point to avalanches being unlikely. The recent large persistent slab in Hayden Creek shows that although slides are unlikely they could be big. We would rule-out big slopes that are heavily wind-loaded, and otherwise feel ok in steep terrain while sticking to safe travel protocols (carry a transceiver, probe AND shovel, and only expose one person at a time to avalanche terrain).

Region
Cooke City
Location (from list)
COOKE CITY
Observer Name
Alex Marienthal

Large Persistent Slab Avalanche in Hayden Creek

Hayden Creek
Cooke City
Code
SS-N-R3-D3-O
Aspect
NE
Latitude
44.99520
Longitude
-109.90800
Notes

While touring today, we saw a deep slab avalanche at the southern end of the Hayden Creek drainage. NE aspect. It seemed to be recent, likely in the last day or so.

Number of slides
1
Number caught
0
Number buried
0
Avalanche Type
Soft slab avalanche
Trigger
Natural trigger
R size
3
D size
3
Bed Surface
O - Old snow
Problem Type
Persistent Weak Layer
Snow Observation Source
Slab Thickness units
centimeters
Single / Multiple / Red Flag
Single Avalanche
Advisory Year

While touring today, we saw a deep slab avalanche at the southern end of the Hayden Creek drainage. NE aspect. It seemed to be recent, likely in the last day or so. Photo: N Mattes

Cooke City, 2025-01-25

Deep Slab Avalanche in Hayden Creek

Date
Activity
Snowboarding

While touring today, we saw a deep slab avalanche at the southern end of the Hayden Creek drainage. NE aspect. It seemed to be recent, likely in the last day or so.

Region
Cooke City
Location (from list)
Hayden Creek
Observer Name
N Mattes

Sheep Creek Obs

Date
Activity
Skiing

Here are our observations from Cooke City today. Our plan was to tour up the south side of Miller Mountain as far as we felt comfortable. Winds were mostly calm during the day, and temperatures were darn-right cold all day, even on southerly aspects. It was -26F when we pulled into town.

The sheep creek drainage had a lot of evidence of prior wind transport, most non-sheltered aspects had textured snow. We dug a pit at 9600’, HS was 190cm! At 150cm above the ground, we encountered a 1cm thick melt-freeze crust with small facets forming over it’s surface. We also noted 4-finger basal facets all the way at the ground.

Our ECT produced nothing terribly remarkable. ECTN25 and ECTN26 on the melt-freeze crust. It could be a layer to look out for in the near-future. The snow above treeline began to stiffen, so we ripped skins around 10k feet and had a lovely ski down.
 

Region
Cooke City
Location (from list)
Sheep Creek
Observer Name
R Parsons

Pebble Cr YNP Observation

Date
Activity
Skiing

Toured into Pebble Cr drainage. 

2 to 4" of new, low density snow. 

Saw evidence of wind loading and two older, small slides on N facing aspects of some W - E sub ridge lines. Slides both appeared to be from wind loaded snow that broke right below the ridge line on the leeward side. 100 to 150' wide, 18" deep and running for 100 to 200'.

No cracking or collapsing found on any aspect during the tour and we couldn't get anything to move.

Nice snow wherever you could find a wind protected area. 

Region
Out of Advisory Area
Location (from list)
Barronette Peak
Observer Name
C. Robinson