23-24

good stability on N aspects at 9000 ft in N. Gallatins

Date
Activity
Skiing

We skied two North-facing lines in the Northern Gallatin range on Wednesday ranging in elevation from 8500 - 9700 ft with some slight West and East flavor. We saw no signs of instability and set off a couple large sluffs in the top 8-12" of snow and some wind-loaded pockets breaking 6-8" deep. I dug a pit and did a CT and ECT and got CT15 on new snow 30cm deep and CT28 on a layer 45 cm deep. Got ECTN16 on same 30-35 cm deep new snow layer. The interface with the old freeze-thaw layer below the new snow did not show a very high quality fracture plane / bed surface for the upper new snow to slide on. the freeze-thaw layer was about 1-2cm thick but did not feel it while skiing. Upon pulling on ECT column with shovel, broke on 45-cm layer with poor quality and also on basal facet layer at ground. Overall right-side-up snowpack density going from fist to pencil hardness pretty linearly. Total depth of snow 210cm. Depth of new snow from last storm approx. 12-16". 9600 ft NNE aspect. 

Region
Northern Gallatin
Location (from list)
Alex Lowe Peak

Cornice Collapse on the Sphinx

Date
Activity
Skiing

Unintentionally triggered a large cornice collapse on the south face of the Sphinx.  I should have expected it, but it was certainly touchier than I was anticipating. Intermittent wind gusts kept upper elevations cooler and we found somewhat cold snow up high. At treeline and below it was hot and crusty! Photos show cornice before and after. 

Region
Southern Madison
Location (from list)
Sphinx Mountain
Observer Name
Haylee Darby

Crazy mtns

Date
Activity
Snowboarding
Snowmobiling

Rode up cottonwood creek on the west side of the crazies. Saw several recent wet loose slides on southern aspects as well as some isolated slides on north/west aspects. Only saw one larger slide that had a wide crown(500ft) D2 on an east aspect.  All slides were breaking in the upper 40cm in new/old snow.

 

Dug a pit north east aspect HS270cm ECTN24 @40cm down from surface. Melt freeze down 70cm might start reacting when water penetrates through upper snow pack, dry snow in upper 60cm but becoming more moist on solars.

Region
Out of Advisory Area

Good test scores on Henderson

Date
Activity
Snowboarding

Dug a pit on our way up the west side of Henderson Mountain. Incline 26 degrees, elevation 9545. Surface depth at 165cm, dug down to about 65cm. Performed extended column test and yielded ECTN17 along melt freeze crust at 135cm above ground. 

Region
Cooke City
Location (from list)
Henderson Mountain
Observer Name
Greg Krumel

Wet Loose Avalanches in Argentina Bowl

Argentina Bowl
Bridger Range
Code
N-R2-D2
Elevation
9000
Aspect
E
Latitude
45.78690
Longitude
-110.93500
Notes

Driving home from Bridger Bowl I spotted a number of wet loose avalanches in Argentina bowl. It was 1:30 PM when I saw them and the sun was still blazing. I would expect there was more activity as the afternoon progressed.

Number caught
0
Number buried
0
Trigger
Natural trigger
R size
2
D size
2
Problem Type
Wet Snow
Snow Observation Source
Slab Thickness units
centimeters
Single / Multiple / Red Flag
Multiple Avalanches
Advisory Year

Driving home from Bridger Bowl, I spotted a number of wet, loose avalanches in Argentina Bowl. It was 1:30 PM when I saw them, and the sun was still blazing. I would expect there was more activity as the afternoon progressed. Photo: GNFAC

Bridger Range, 2024-04-11

Wet Loose Avalanches in Argentina Bowl

Date

Driving home from Bridger Bowl I spotted a number of wet loose avalanches in Argentina bowl. It was 1:30 PM when I saw them and the sun was still blazing. I would expect there was more activity as the afternoon progressed.

Region
Bridger Range
Location (from list)
Argentina Bowl
Observer Name
Dave Zinn

GNFAC Avalanche Forecast for Thu Apr 11, 2024

Snowpack and Avalanche Discussion

<p>Yesterday, lingering cloud cover in the morning kept wet snow avalanches mostly at bay for an extra day. Today will be 5-10 degrees warmer, and direct sun will bake slopes, increasing the danger of wet snow avalanches. These will generally slide as loose snow that starts at a point and fan out as they entrain more snow. While small, these slides have the consistency of wet concrete and can quickly sweep a skier or rider off their feet, pushing them toward terrain trap obstacles such as trees, cliffs and gullies. Less likely are larger wet slab avalanches that can break widely across slopes like this avalanche on the Fin in Cooke City one week ago (<a href="https://www.mtavalanche.com/images/24/fin-cooke-city"><strong><span>pho…;). Recognize increasing danger as the upper 6 inches of the snowpack becomes wet and slushy or you observe rollerballs and small wet snow avalanches. Move to cooler aspects or return to the trailhead before conditions deteriorate.</p>

<p>At upper elevations and cooler aspects where the snow remains powdery, dry slab avalanches are the primary concern, especially on slopes loaded by wind-drifted snow. While these are becoming less likely as we move away from the last snowstorm (<a href="https://www.mtavalanche.com/avalanche-activity"><strong><span>avalanche activity log</span></strong></a>, <a href="https://youtu.be/iO3EWqb0oqg?feature=shared"><strong><span>Ramp video</span></strong></a>, <a href="https://youtu.be/Fjo1jg8p49M?feature=shared"><strong><span>Throne video</span></strong></a>), dig down through the recent snow, test for instability above the thick melt-freeze crust, and watch for signs of instability, such as cracking at the snowpack surface. Retreat to lower-angle slopes and non-wind-loaded terrain if you observe signs of instability.</p>

<p>Skiers south of Cooke City dug a snowpit to the ground in a shallower area and used an extended column test to investigate the weak faceted snow that continues to make up the foundation of our snowpack. The group was surprised when the test propagated, indicating continued basal instability (<a href="https://www.mtavalanche.com/node/31802"><strong><span>observation</span…;). While avalanches failing near the base of the snowpack have become much less likely, the potential remains, especially on slopes that remained cooler during this winter’s warm-ups.</p>

<p>Human-triggered, dry snow avalanches are possible, and the danger is MODERATE. Wet snow avalanches will become likely as the day warms, and the danger will rise to CONSIDERABLE.</p>

Upcoming Avalanche Education and Events

Hyalite Road Closure: Hyalite road is closed to ALL MOTORIZED VEHICLES until the morning of May 16. This is a regular annual road closure to reduce road damage during the spring thaw. Bicycle and foot traffic are allowed. Contact the Bozeman FS Ranger District for more info.

Events and Education Calendar.