Most notable test result was ECTP16 down 35 cm on a layer of surface hoar. Photo: E Heiman
Forecast link: GNFAC Avalanche Forecast for Sun Feb 9, 2025
Most notable test result was ECTP16 down 35 cm on a layer of surface hoar. Photo: E Heiman
Most notable test result was ECTP16 down 35 cm on a layer of surface hoar. Photo: E Heiman
Dug on a NE aspect at about 7800’ on Mt. Ellis. Noticed pretty significant wind loading/cornice development from yesterday and was easily able to get small cornices to break off. Most notable test result was ECTP16 down 35 cm on a layer of surface hoar. Besides the concerning surface hoar layer the snowpack was generally right side up and seemed pretty solid. Photo of pit profile attached.
The wind had hammered snow surfaces at all elevations above tree line on Mount Blackmore. There was evidence of several R1-2/ D1-2 wind slab avalanches that likely ran this weekend on the east face of Blackmore.
Three to four inches of new snow from yesterday sat on top of the dust layer that got deposited across most of the forecast area on Monday and Tuesday. Photo: GNFAC
There was evidence of several R1-2/ D1-2 wind slab avalanches that likely ran this weekend on the east face of Blackmore. Photo: GNFAC
Elephant Mountain and the summer trail area were scoured down to the tundra. Photo: GNFAC
We toured up the standard ascent route on Mount Blackmore to the shoulder. Three to four inches of new snow from yesterday sat on top of the dust layer that got deposited across most of the forecast area on Monday and Tuesday.
We stopped and dug a full pit on the lowest pitch of skiing and found good stability in this wind-sheltered terrain. Incidentally, this lowest pitch was also the best skiing by a large margin. All the terrain above this was very wind-affected. We were looking for near-surface facets and surface hoar that formed last week and got buried by recent snow in some areas. We didn't find it. This bodes well for long-term stability, but we'll keep looking. Test scores were unremarkable, ECTN5 below yesterday's snow, ECTN15, 17, and 30 at various levels within last weekend's storm snow. No other failures, no propagation.
The wind had hammered snow surfaces at all elevations above this. Surfaces stiffened. There was a tree that blew over recently. Elephant Mountain and the summer trail area were scoured down to the tundra. There was evidence of several R1-2/ D1-2 wind slab avalanches that likely ran this weekend on the east face of Blackmore.
We dug again on the shoulder with unremarkable results and no evidence of new weak layers that will be players.
Bottom Line:
Manage it by:
Figured I would send in some observations as we were out yesterday in Whits Lake back in Dutchman's Basin and with extreme wind the snow was getting moved around and the wind was putting snow in unusual locations. This was a wind loaded hill but a very shallow angle hill maybe 20-25 degrees. Snow broke on an old layer before this past weekend's storm, that slab was probably 14-24" think in spots. Snow was generally stable other than wind blown spots.