From an email: "ECTP 5 at the top of a chute on the south face of the Texas Meadows knob. Propagated on a layer 15cm from the top of the snowpack." Photo: J. Zimmerer
18-19
Snowboarder triggered wind slab in Middle Basin
From Instagram @chartierk:
"Careful out there this year! While we are lucky enough to have a mostly stable snowpack here in Southwest Montana, we did just find this little wind slab well below the ridge line in Middle Basin. Slowboarder was fine"
From Instagram:
"Careful out there this year! While we are lucky enough to have a mostly stable snowpack here in Southwest Montana, we did just find this little wind slab well below the ridge line in Middle Basin. Slowboarder was fine" @chartierk
A skier found 80 cm of stable snow on an east facing slope at 9200' in Beehive Basin. Winds created these newborn cornices along the ridge. Photo: T. Allen
GNFAC Avalanche Forecast for Sat Nov 10, 2018
<p>In the Bridger Range, Hyalite, and near Cooke City there is 3-4’ of settled snow on the ground equal to 4-6” of <strong><a href="https://www.nrcs.usda.gov/wps/portal/nrcs/detail/or/snow/?cid=nrcs142p2… water equivalent</a></strong> (SWE). The mountains near Big Sky and West Yellowstone have 2-4’ of snow equal to 2-4” of SWE. Warm and heavy snowfall over the last couple weeks built a relatively dense and right-side-up snowpack. Instabilities during the storms were mostly confined to the upper layers of new and drifted snow (<strong><a href="https://www.mtavalanche.com/avalanche-activity">recent avalanche activity</a></strong>), and these should gain strength quickly.</p>
<p>Wind was light to moderate at the end of the storm on Wednesday, and it left plenty of snow for strong wind yesterday to drift into fresh slabs. Yesterday, ice climbers in Hyalite triggered a small slab on their descent (<strong><a href="https://www.mtavalanche.com/node/19019">details</a></strong>, <strong><a href="https://www.mtavalanche.com/images/18/ice-climber-triggered-slab">photo…;). This is a clear sign that fresh drifts are unstable, and a reminder to be extra cautious in steep gullies where even a small slab could take you for a deadly ride. Avoid steep, wind loaded slopes if you see blowing and drifting snow or cracking of fresh drifts.</p>
<p>Skiers in the Bridger Range, Hyalite, Cooke City and Beehive have reported a mostly stable snowpack with the recent large storm snow bonding generally well to the old snow at the ground. This is similar to what Doug and I found earlier this week in the Bridgers (<u><strong><a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R-pDJgVBPQI&list=PLXu5151nmAvRNl9ku…;, <u><strong><a href="https://www.mtavalanche.com/images/18/bridger-snowpit">photo</a></stron…;). However, a skier in Hyalite and a skier in Cooke City found sugary facets below a hard crust in the bottom foot of their snowpits (<strong><a href="https://www.mtavalanche.com/images/18/facets-below-crust">photo</a>, <a href="https://www.mtavalanche.com/images/18/blackmore-snowpack">photo</a></st…;), and the skier in Cooke had unstable stability test results. These observations and the large avalanche that Big Sky triggered earlier this week (<u><strong><a href="https://www.mtavalanche.com/node/18990">details</a></strong></u>) are clues to pay attention to this layer, and dig to see if it exists where you are riding. You can suspect this layer exists on high elevation and shady slopes (facing northerly), but it can’t be ruled out unless you dig to the ground.</p>
<p>We are preparing for winter, scheduling avalanche classes, and setting up weather stations. If you get outside send us an observation via our website, email (<u><a href="mailto:mtavalanche@gmail.com">mtavalanche@gmail.com</a></u>), phone (406-587-6984), or Instagram (#gnfacobs).</p>
Upcoming Avalanche Education and Events
Our education calendar is full of awareness lectures and field courses. Check it out: Events and Education Calendar.
November 14, 1-hr Avalanche Awareness, 6-7pm at Spire Climbing Center
November 14, 1-hr Avalanche Awareness, 6-7pm at Round House Sports
November 26, MSU Snow and Avalanche Workshop, 5-9pm at MSU SUB Ballroom A
Ice climber triggered small slab in Hyalite
Ice climber triggered. From e-mail: "Was descending off of Zach Attack tonight and set off a small slab in the gully on the decent. This was about 100 meters below the start of pitch 1. Constant whipping winds and lots of new deposited snow likely caused the slab to form. Climber caused. Didn’t carry me as it was small. Would be wary of the mummy cooler gullies abover scepter as well."
Small dry loose slides near Cooke
From e-mail: "Was descending off of Zach Attack tonight and set off a small slab in the gully on the decent. This was about 100 meters below the start of pitch 1. Constant whipping winds and lots of new deposited snow likely caused the slab to form. Climber caused. Didn’t carry me as it was small. Would be wary of the mummy cooler gullies abover scepter as well."
From e-mail: "Was descending off of Zach Attack tonight and set off a small lab in the gully on the decent. This was about 100 meters below the start of pitch 1. Constant whipping winds and lots of new deposited snow likely caused the slab to form. Climber caused. Didn’t carry me as it was small. Would be wary of the mummy cooler gullies abover scepter as well."