On March 26 many natural wet slides occurred at Bridger Bowl in closed terrain. Photo: BBSP
Forecast link: GNFAC Avalanche Forecast for Sun Mar 27, 2022
On March 26 many natural wet slides occurred at Bridger Bowl in closed terrain. Photo: BBSP
A snowmobiler triggered this slide on 3/26/22 on a northeast facing slope near 9,000' in the Taylor Fork area.
No freezing temps overnight below 10,000'
Freezing temps overnight created breakable crust in the morning which quickly deteriorated as the day warmed. (Temps rose surprisingly faster than we anticipated. Experience large whumphs while ascending the NW shoulder of Electric Pk. at 9600 ft. Without hesitation we turned back and skied out the skin track. The snow became very rotten and we penetrated to boot-tops often while exiting.
<p>Avalanche conditions today will become very dangerous as the day heats up. </p>
<p>Temperatures overnight stayed above freezing or dropped just barely below freezing, which means that the snow surface will only have a thin crust this morning. High temperatures today will be 5 or more degrees warmer than yesterday’s. These temperatures will quickly break down any crusts which formed overnight. Mostly sunny skies mean the strong late March sun will bake the snow surface and ramp up meltwater production. As meltwater starts to percolate down it will hit weak layers and crusts in the upper snowpack that will pool the water and destabilize quickly when they get wet. The combination of these factors is setting us up for dangerous conditions today. Moderate winds may help provide some cooling effect, but they will likely be overwhelmed by the other factors. Be particularly wary of steep, low elevation slopes sheltered from the wind, especially as it’s getting later in the afternoon. Make plans that avoid steep, sunny slopes as the day warms. If you’re sinking more than ankle deep into wet snow, it is time to move to shadier, lower angled slopes, or just head home (<a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g0T8RQK3oN0"><strong><u>video</u></stro…;). Expect to trigger loose wet avalanches (which may start gouging deep into the snowpack and picking up significant volume) and wet slab avalanches are becoming a real possibility as well.</p>
<p>Yesterday, Alex and Dave investigated Thursday’s skier triggered avalanche on Woody Ridge, near Cooke City (<a href="https://www.mtavalanche.com/images/22/republic-creek-avalanche"><strong…;, <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WpfhtKv_4yQ"><strong><u>video</u></stro…;). They found that while the snow surface was wet, the rest of the snowpack was dry and the avalanche broke on the same weak layers we’ve been concerned about for months. Additionally, several other new slab avalanches were reported yesterday on sunny slopes around Cooke City that likely broke on these same weak layers (<a href="https://www.mtavalanche.com/images/22/south-face-abundance-slab"><stron…;, <a href="https://www.mtavalanche.com/node/26338"><strong><u>details</u></strong>…;). Melting surface snow is destabilizing the snowpack even on slopes where meltwater hasn’t yet reached the widespread weak layers. Even shady slopes require careful snowpack assessment as avalanches on these weak layers are still possible there.</p>
<p>Don’t push your luck today. Make conservative route plans and be ready to turn around early if conditions are worse than anticipated. </p>
<p>The avalanche danger is MODERATE this morning and will rise to CONSIDERABLE as the day heats up this afternoon. </p>
<p>If you get out, please send us your observations no matter how brief. You can submit them via our website, email (mtavalanche@gmail.com), phone (406-587-6984), or Instagram (#gnfacobs).</p>
<p> </p>
Slab avalanches were observed on slopes baking in the sun near Cooke City on 3/25/22:
-A slide on the south face of Abundance that either broke naturally or was remotely triggered by a snowmobiler. Appears 3+ ft deep and 150 ft wide
-A small slide near Bull of the Woods Pass that was snowmobile triggered.
Slab avalanche on Mount Abundance. Observed 3/25/22. It either broke naturally or was remotely triggered. Photo: D. Green
Low temps at or above freezing
Portion of the crown of an avalanche that was triggered by a group of skiers on 3/24/22 on Woody Ridge south of Cooke City. Photo: GNFAC
View down the path of an avalanche that was triggered by a group of skiers on 3/24/22 on Woody Ridge south of Cooke City. Photo: GNFAC