Snowpack and Avalanche Discussion
<p>Today is an avalanche accident waiting to happen. A powder-starved community and clearing skies will have excitement levels as elevated as the avalanche danger. Please do not get killed in an avalanche today.</p>
<p>Very dangerous avalanche conditions exist in the Bridger Range, where 10” of snow equal to 1.0” of <a href="https://avalanche.org/avalanche-encyclopedia/snowpack/snowpack-observat… water equivalent</span></a> (SWE) fell in the last 24 hours. Natural and human-triggered avalanches breaking 1-2 feet deep are likely. Limit mountain travel to slopes less than 30 degrees and avoid avalanche runout zones.</p>
<p>New and wind-drifted snow is not bonding well to the old snow surface. Yesterday at the Throne, we triggered small avalanches by tapping our ski poles on steep slopes. With more snow, these will be much larger. Additionally, we triggered an enormous collapse on a wind-loaded slope, causing us to tuck our tails and retreat (<a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kFhSJq7vJ4M"><strong><span>video</span>…;). Similar slabs of wind-drifted snow avalanched naturally on Saddle Peak on Saturday afternoon (<a href="https://www.mtavalanche.com/node/30639"><strong><span>photo</span></str…;). The snowpack structure is very weak, and large avalanches breaking widely across slopes and running far into runout zones are on the table.</p>
<p><span>The danger is HIGH on all slopes.</span></p>
<p>Dangerous avalanche conditions exist in the mountains near Cooke City, West Yellowstone, Island Park, Big Sky and south of Bozeman. With new snow, we are again scratching the underbelly of an avalanche warning. Pioneer Mountain and Hyalite Canyon in the Northern Madison and Northern Gallatin Ranges came out on top with 7-10” of snow equal to 0.5-0.6” of SWE, while the rest of the area got 2-4” equal to 0.2” SWE.</p>
<p>Human-triggered avalanches breaking up to 4 feet deep and hundreds of feet wide are likely. Backcountry travelers have triggered slides from low-angle terrain above and below steep pitches with regularity this season due to persistent weak layers buried in the snowpack. This weekend, one group triggered three avalanches from low-angle terrain in Cooke City (<a href="https://www.mtavalanche.com/node/30678"><strong><span>photos and observation</span></strong></a>), a rider triggered a large slide on Lionhead Ridge from the safety of the flats (<a href="https://www.mtavalanche.com/node/30641"><strong><span>photo and observation</span></strong></a>), the same near Big Sky (<a href="https://www.mtavalanche.com/node/30621"><strong><span>photo and observation</span></strong></a>) and in Island Park (<a href="https://www.mtavalanche.com/node/30642"><strong><span>video</span></str…;). The largest was an avalanche that broke 4 feet deep and 4000 feet wide in Tepee Basin last Wednesday (<a href="https://www.mtavalanche.com/node/30547"><strong><span>photos, video and description</span></strong></a>). These are a small collection of <em>nearly 50 entries </em>of natural and human-triggered slides recorded in our <a href="https://www.mtavalanche.com/avalanche-activity"><strong><span>avalanche activity log</span></strong></a> in the last week alone.</p>
<p>Conservative travel plans that stick to terrain less than 30 degrees are essential to coming home at the end of a fun day in the mountains. The danger is CONSIDERABLE.</p>
King and Queen of The Ridge Results
We closed out King and Queen (of the Apron) with $23,208 raised! A huge Thank You to all who participated and raised funds for The Friends of the GNFAC! The community came out big after a postponed event; participants were crushing boot pack laps and even getting some powder turns while fundraising for Friends of GNFAC. Top Fundraising teams were: Cooke City Exxon ($8,271), Science Saves Lives ($4,292), and Map Brewing Company ($1,905).