24-25

Lots of Fluff, Not Much Slab

Date
Activity
Skiing

We toured into Beehive Basin up and over to Bear Basin down through Spanky's to the valley bottom. A foot of low-density new snow fell with very little wind. The skiing was excellent, and stability was good (for now). The new snow was not behaving cohesively (like a slab) in the terrain we visited, and loose snow avalanches or sluffs were our primary concern. We triggered some loose snow avalanches that quickly picked up speed. These would cause skiers and riders problems in steep or technical terrain but were relatively harmless in open/ non-technical terrain. 

Snowpit analysis in the upper-elevation southwest-facing terrain revealed no significant instability, with ECTN scores in the teens and 20s, and no failure at the January layer of near-surface facets. Up and over the ridge on an east-facing slope was also relatively stable (and deep -  230 cm). We did get a repeatable ECTP29 75 cm down from the surface, but no failure on the January surface hoar layer. 

We felt comfortable traveling in and around avalanche terrain using our safe travel practices (one at a time on the steeps, beacon, shovel, probe) and staying mindful of the loose snow avalanches. 

WE ARE IN A PERIOD OF DYNAMIC WEATHER. WIND or more new snow will change stability, making conditions more dangerous. Pay close attention to signs of increasing instability, such as avalanche activity and shooting cracks.

Finally, because every party needs a pooper... be cautious around tree wells. Non-avalanche-related snow immersion accidents are a very real threat right now. 

Region
Northern Madison
Location (from list)
Beehive Basin
Observer Name
Dave Zinn

Gallatin Canyon

Date
Activity
Skiing

We toured from Gallatin River up to 8000'. Generally strong, deep, snowpack. We did not look at north-facing snow at the lowest elevations - that could be weak but doesn't have much of a load. Pretty amazing to have such good coverage all the way down the to river level.

 

Region
Northern Madison
Observer Name
Staples & Ronczkowski

Unconsolidated new snow Northern Madison

Date
Activity
Snowboarding

Got an early start on a tour in the Northern Madison range, exploring subalpine terrain.

We observed approximately 15-20” of fresh snow which was unconsolidated, and didn’t observe any wind affected areas, even at mountain tops and ridge tops. Also did not see any cracking as we broke trail and skied over test convexities. The snow was quite light as well, and new snow appeared to be right side up. 
 

Snow pit results were unremarkable on a SE aspect at 9k feet. 
 

Lots of snow available for transport!

Region
Northern Madison
Location (from list)
NORTHERN MADISON RANGE
Observer Name
George Faegre

Test scores and Intentionally triggered avalanches in Lick Crk

Date
Activity
Skiing

11:40

8017ft

147 SE

HST 85cm

25 degrres 

 

ECTN 14 20 down 

CT 11 q1 20 down 

ECTN 19 20 down 

CT5 q2   20down 

 

12:10

8129ft

33 NE

HST 165 cm

10 Degrees

 

ECTN 26 34 down 

CT 16 Q1 32 down

ECTN 19 30 down


SS-ASc-R1-D.5-I 

310 Degrees  NW

8129ft

 

 

Region
Northern Gallatin
Location (from list)
Lick Creek
Observer Name
Tagg Cole

Avalanche up Lionhead

Date
Activity
Snowmobiling

Avalanche in Lionhead. Broke on wind slab then triggered persistent slab underneath.

Region
Lionhead Range
Location (from list)
LIONHEAD AREA
Observer Name
KC- Ride Rasmussen Style

Stable but busy on Ellis

Date
Activity
Skiing

Skied Ellis yesterday, good snow but quite busy. Dug a pit at ~8000’, ENE aspect. No failure in ECT with snowpack from 130-140cm. Bit of a crust/layer ~ 30cm below surface on open, exposed slopes but not present in forest. Minor wind impact on top slopes, zero wind impact below ~7800’. 
 

Region
Northern Gallatin
Location (from list)
Mt Ellis
Observer Name
Garrett S.