Snow Observations List
Skier triggered avalanche at Lionhead on NNE, 8600 ft. Video of remote triggering slide on IG
Full Snow Observation ReportPoor test score near Bradley Meadow on an E aspect, at around 7600', during a Friends course. Height of snow was 65-70 cm, results were a sensitive ECTP 3 on the old facets.
Full Snow Observation ReportI skied off the backside of Bradley's with the intention of touring up and skiing those north facing shots off of Texas toward the playground. Skinning across the flat meadow below the cliffs heading toward Texas I got several thundering whumphs. I usually feel pretty comfortable on a Moderate day skinning up that notch and giving the overhead hazard as much birth as possible. But, it felt like remote triggers were a real possibility and I was by myself, so I decided not to test my hypothesis that I could set a low exposure skin track and spun back to the top of Bradley's. I was thinking of that observation from a few years back where the solo tourer skinned up those cones to the skinners left and triggered a slide that tickled the traditional skin track. I didn't get any collapses on other slopes, just skinning across that flat meadow. Coverage was as thin as you would expect. There were some steep tracks down Wolverine and off the side of Ramp that didn't produce any action.
Full Snow Observation ReportWe skied two west-facing slopes and one east-facing slope between 8,500 - 9,200ft. on the shoulders of Beehive Basin Sunday morning. The ice crust interface in the lower-middle snowpack seems to sit between two layers of rather incohesive, sugary snow. We did not get results on several hand shears which is thought to be because of the lack of a slab above the ice crust in the snowpack.
One pocket in a glade of one of our lines had a short shooting crack ahead of my skis as I set our skintrack. ~1ft. of snow propagated uphill onto my skis. With further examination (pictures), it seems that the slab in this pocket, located in a small northwest-facing aspect was more cohesive than other slopes skied today.
We did not see any other signs of instability during our tour. One natural, likely old avalanche was observed closer to Beehive Peak, on the east-facing steep section of Beehive Basin's west shoulder.
Full Snow Observation ReportWent touring with the intention of skiing the main Texas Meadow S. face. Heard numerous loud whumphs while skinning across the meadow below the face. Decided to not ski and dig a pit on a similar south-facing slope. Results were a CT15 Q2. On the way back up to Bradley's had several smaller collapses but none as large and widespread as those observed in the meadow. Plenty of large surface hoar crystals on my way in too.
Full Snow Observation ReportTraveled Hayden and Republic Creek last two days. Surface hoar throughout all elevations and aspects including ridge tops. Generally large crystal size.
Some settling, no whomphing observed. Old slab avalanche on west Republic Ridge nearing Republic pass. Snow pit off Woody Ridge on SE aspect towards Hayden found ~80cm snow depth at 9800’ with supportive upper snowpack (4f) above weak facets to ground. ECTP16 with propagation on this interface. Ski quality good. Southern aspects developed a thin solar crust through the wknd.
Full Snow Observation Report
From email: "Miller Ridge snowpit from today: 9300', NE Aspect. HS: 67cms. ECTP 11 at 36.
Then we toured over for some runs on SW Henderson. Obviously more supportable over there. Less collapsing.
Aside from the widespread SH that has been forming on all aspects and elevations this week, the shady aspects appear to be getting more faceted mid-snowpack, while the solar aspects appear to be gaining strength"
Full Snow Observation ReportRepublic creek tour snowpack observations:
Observed collapsing/cracking in lower Midway meadows. Snowpit tests produced unstable results - easy propagation and failure between old snow (Oct-Nov) and new snow (early December).
Noted one old natural avalanche on south Woody Ridge, west aspect ~9500'.
Significant surface hoar growth in Republic creek.
Full Snow Observation ReportHeight of Snow from 50-65. Traveled around Bradley Meadow area and down into Wolverine Basin. ECTP 19 @35 cm down (unstable result) 7500 ft east aspect. Experienced a large collapse below the N half of Bradley Meadows in a small meadow - 7400 ft east aspect.
Full Snow Observation ReportWidespread wumfing between 7,000 - 8,700ft. in Targhee Creek. (12/15)
No natural slides observed.
Crazy large surface hoar also observed on open, southerly clearings, measured 1+ cm. Very rotten snowpack otherwise.
Full Snow Observation ReportBig Sky Ski Patrol reported two natural avalanches, seen today (12/15) in closed terrain.
From email:
"It looks possible that they released at two different times during the day today.....It looks to be the storm snow, which was sitting on lower-density snow at the old snow interface. That interface likely had a layer of faceted snow on top of the old, crusty snow. "
Full Snow Observation ReportFrom email: "Skied into Sheep Creek yesterday. (12/14)
Warm and sunny day. Above freezing temps at 9500' on solar slopes. Crusts forming. Lots of Surface hoar otherwise.
Noted one recent large slab avalanche on a SE aspect of Miller Ridge. Estimated to be about 100' wide and 1-4' deep. It ran about 1/3 track or 600' vert. No fresh snow on the debris, so it likely ran at the end of the last snowfall event.
Less collapsing up there yesterday than what we've been experiencing all week, but there was one BIG collapse in one of the meadows in the valley bottom (estimated 300'+ diameter). Remote triggers are still a serious concern.
Snowpit from a S, SE aspect around 9300'. HS: 95, ECTP29 at 46."
Full Snow Observation Report9700’, W, 23 degrees, Hs 100cm
Ectp16 @60cm on .5-1.5mm facets
The average snow depth was around 70cm with slab depth being 25-40 cm. Widespread surface hoar on the surface, all elevations and aspects.
I didn’t feel any collapsing or see any cracking.
Full Snow Observation ReportWe rode up Denny Creek towards Watkins Creek and spent the day below the ridge where we saw two natural avalanches. These avalanches broke 12-18" deep on weak faceted snow above a stiff crust. The first avalanche presumably happened sometime near the end of the last storm cycle (12/11), as it had a few inches of snow on the debris. The second was more recent, in the last 24-36 hours. Both were at 8500' and were on NE and E-facing slopes.
We dug two snow pits near these avalanches and saw propagation in both on a layer of weak sugary snow buried about a foot deep (ECTP13 & ECTP12). Across the area surface hoar was easy to find on the snow surface.
Full Snow Observation ReportPerformed two ECTs and a PST on an E aspect at roughly 9000’. HS was about 50 cm and the old faceted snow below the new snow was obvious. We had two ECTX in adjacent pits and a PST result of 40/100 Arr on the interface of old and new snow. These results were surprising as the snowpack structure had 4/5 lemons and we experienced Whumpfing on the same slope just 100 feet away. We also experienced whumpfs in other locations throughout the basin.
Full Snow Observation Report
Toured up to the lake and dug at 9200ft west facing just up slope from the lake. Failure while trying to isolate the column for a etc on fist attempt. 2nd test was etcp1. Some collapsing while skiing across the flats. Three days ago in middle, had some huge surface hoar as well as big collapsing and cracking.
Full Snow Observation ReportToday I was skiing a south facing slope between 8500-9500 ft near Mt Henderson. I observed at least ten large collapses, some of which sent cracks 30 feet long. This slope had a shallow snowpack relative to the rest of the area.
Full Snow Observation ReportWe drove and then rode up Little Bear this morning on the 3138 road (also snowmobile route #900). Once 3138 splits off from 980 there was mostly enough snow for riding on the road without issues but little else. Snow depth varied from 4-6 inches, down to 2-3 inches in sun and wind exposed areas, to as much as 18 inches or so higher up (8400'). We also saw some spectacular surface hoar- probably 1-2" tall in places with extremely sugary snow underneath; often so sugary we weren't leaving well defined tracks behind our sleds. As with everywhere else, we heard some collapses while off of our machines.
Full Snow Observation ReportFrom email: 12/13: "Many slopes had half-inch to inch-sized surface hoar crystals on the surface, some of the largest I've ever seen!
Wind was light out of the north on the ridgeline. We noticed 2 natural avalanches on the east-facing slopes below Bald Peak. I lost count, but we experienced well over 30+ collapses while walking on the ridgeline. Many of these collapses were very large and we were able to watch the slopes 'sink' by upwards of an inch which made our hair stand on end.
We dug a pit near the saddle below Lionhead Peak at 9300' on an east-facing slope (HS ~85cm). We performed an ECT and our results indicated poor stability (ECTP 14 @ 50cm)."
Full Snow Observation ReportFrom email: "Over the last couple days, I’ve been seeing very large surface hoar formations on most of the snowpack from ~7000 ft+. They continue to grow day to day, I’ve measured crystals over 5mm tall. Hopefully the warm temperatures over the next week will melt these before our next storm cycle, but only time will tell."
Full Snow Observation Report