Gusty winds transporting snow in Taylor Fork on Saturday. Triggered a 4-5 inch deep wind slab that propagated about 50 ft at the top of a north east facing slope at 9,500 ft.
Photo: JP
Forecast link: GNFAC Avalanche Forecast for Sun Dec 15, 2024
Gusty winds transporting snow in Taylor Fork on Saturday. Triggered a 4-5 inch deep wind slab that propagated about 50 ft at the top of a north east facing slope at 9,500 ft.
Photo: JP
Photo: Anonymous
Dug a pit at 8650ft on a SE facing slope just a few miles west of Cooke City. ECTP15. Failed and propagated on facets underneath the most recent storm snow about 20cm down, didn't feel like a wind slab but presumably was partially wind loaded from the winds the past few days. Pretty much the entire snowpack under this recent layer is facets separated by crusts, with varying levels of crystal thickness, ranging from larger near the ground to finer higher up. HS 65cm.
Surface hoar stripe in snowpit near Cooke.
Photo: GNFAC
We skied near Lulu Pass and dug a pit on a northeast facing slope at 9,500'. There was 6-8" of low density new snow on top of a thick layer of surface hoar (10-16mm, photos attached). Photo: GNFAC
We skied near Lulu Pass and dug a pit on a northeast facing slope at 9,500'. There was 6-8" of low density new snow on top of a thick layer of surface hoar (10-16mm, photos attached). Snow depth was 90cm. There was a layer of small facets directly below the surface hoar, and below that the snowpack mostly had rounded grains and showed little signs of weakness. We had an ECTN12 on the surface hoar layer. While skiing I saw some 5 foot long cracks across the snow surface on a wind-affected convexity.
I'm not sure how widespread the buried surface hoar is, but this will be our primary interface of concern when we get more snow. We did not find surface hoar on south and west facing terrain in this area, but there was a crust with small facets below it buried 6" deep. Right now there is not quite enough recent new snow to create widespread instability. I do suspect a slab of drifted snow or a wind stiffened slab could propagate easily, especially if it lies on buried surface hoar.
Light snow fell most of the day with maybe an inch of accumulation all day. Wind was light and temps were single digits to low teens. Some moderate gusts in the afternoon, and winds increasing in town this evening.
Noticed this natural avalanche on 12/8. East facing slope, ~9500 feet, Hayden Creek above Ripcurl area
Noticed this natural avalanche on 12/8. East facing slope, ~9500 feet, Hayden Creek above Ripcurl area. Photo: J. Mundt
Noticed this natural avalanche on 12/8. East facing slope, ~9500 feet, Hayden Creek above Ripcurl area