Snow Observations List

From email: "Today I drove down Taylor fork road, with the thought of potentially getting up on woodward mtn, until I saw a crown on the NE
Face of its northern summit, basically wall to wall near the top of the slide path. There were a couple other sled tracks that also went to the end of the road, so I figured maybe it was pretty recent, as I didn’t hear about it in the advisory. Concerning because it appears to have propagated maybe 250ft across, while maybe only 1-2 ft deep"


We toured Beehive Basin up to the prayer flags and dropped into Bear Basin. We dug one full pit in the starting zone of Tyler's (1m of snow, ECTP28 on basal facets - rough/non-planar fracture) but were primarily looking at surface conditions.
The surface evolved throughout the day, so we must continue tracking its progression. We found surface hoar in the valley of Beehive, where inverted temperatures were the coldest, crusts with near-surface facets below, and some straight near-surface facet—recycled powder, along with thicker crust and wet snow.
The warmer temperatures at higher elevations that came with the inversion are saving us from worse faceting. When we returned to the vehicle, the surface hoar had burned off in the warming temperatures, and others were moist.
Surface conditions will continue to evolve but probably won't get stronger in the coming days. The good news is that the surface is holding up better than I expected.
Full Snow Observation ReportLow danger is good for now. Nice to see green on the map.

Wide spread layer of Surface Hoar mid and upper elevations Two Top area
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Large surface hoar across a variety of elevations and aspects at Lick Creek. It was 2-5mm large and present on almost all flats and non-solar aspects, and from the road up to 8500 ft and above. The most recent snow was wetting out on the solars, and temperatures were well above freezing at my car when I got back to it in the early afternoon.
Full Snow Observation ReportToured up Ellis. Observed well-preserved surface hoar in meadows and on the ridgeline on NE aspects. MF crust starting to form on SE aspects. Dug at 8230’ on an ESE aspect. HS 120. Found the buried surface hoar layer from a few weeks ago down 25cm. Got collapsing but no propagation on this layer. Beautiful day!
Full Snow Observation ReportTook the ridge out to Bridger Peak. Winds have done their damage and skiing conditions were quite bad. Winds had affected snow at nearly all elevations.
Snow depths on SE and NE aspects were 120 cm, and the snowpack is dense, hard, solid, and stable. We couldn't find any evidence of near-surface facets from recent cold weather and clear days/nights. The combination of wind and warmth destroyed them if they existed.
On south aspects, the snow had become wet, and we spotted a few rollerballs/pinwheels - mostly near exposed rocks.
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Drove up the road to the summit of Sawtell Peak for some weather station maintenance (it's back up and fully operational!).
Had good views into the Centennial Mountains from the summit (Mt Jeffferson, Reas Peak, head of Yale Creek) and saw no signs of avalanche activity.
The top inch of the snowpack was moist on south facing slopes at 9800 ft around noon and there was water running out of the cutbank onto the road. A few roller balls were visible, but didn't see any other wet loose activity.
Full Snow Observation ReportLots of tracks everywhere - climbing onto all sorts of slopes.

Recent avalanches noted on the NE-E aprons on cedar mountain. SS-N-R2-3-D2-I These appeared to have possibly happened during the last storm cycle and looked to be isolated to layers within the new old snow interface. I also noted similar activity on the same aspects on the adjacent ridge during our approach.
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Pretty widespread surface hoar this morning near Hyalite Reservoir. It didn't seem to be as widespread higher up on Mt Blackmore, but we did see some pockets of it up there.
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From IG Message: Wind slab avalanche on “east facing slope in hyalite”
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Widespread SH had formed over the past couple of days in areas on the approach that were out in the open but shaded from the wind. We observed cornices in the back of the basin (NE/E facing) and a small wind slab had broken off underneath them. Wind-blown snow had filled in the skin track and ski lines from yesterday in maiden bowl. The sun was baking the southern facing slopes for most of the day today, and when we skied out, the snow in the direct sunlight was wet.
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We skied up west Woody Ridge and skied down into Hayden Creek about 500 feet, then back up and over, and out Republic Creek.
Skies were clear with calm winds and a light breeze at the ridgetop. Temperatures were still mostly cold, single digits down low and teens up high in the morning. The sun felt hot mid-day, snow bombs were falling off trees and there were some small rollerballs around steep rocks on southerly facing slopes.
We saw one old, but very large persistent slab avalanche further up Republic Creek (pictured). It was on similar aspect and elevation as a somewhat more recent persistent slab in nearby Hayden Creek, North-northeast, 10,000'. It appeared to be 6'+ deep and 500'+ wide. The bed surface and crown had been partially drifted in, so it seemed it was probably at least a week old...?
There was also a recent cornice fall on a very big steep slope up Republic Creek (picture) which did not trigger anything large or deeper, but entrained some snow and ran over a thousand feet vertical.
We dug a pit at 9,900' on a west aspect. Snow depth was 150cm (5 feet). We had an ECTN11 below 3 inches of snow on top of small sugary facets near the surface. There were soft (4f+) sugary facets at the bottom of the snowpack, but they did not break in an ECT or with extra force. Snow depth above 9,000' was ~4 feet average based on a few places we probed as we toured up.
There were signs of a lot of previous wind up high. It has been a few days without wind, but there are probably some isolated instabilities of small stiff wind slabs sitting on facets which could be triggered.
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We triggered a small soft slab avalanche when skinning near the top of Pair Of Chutes in the Playground. The slab was about 1 foot thick, fist hardness, propagated 20 feet wide and ran 50 feet before breaking up and arresting. The slab did not entrain additional snow as it slid. The avalanche hit my feet but did not disturb my balance. However, it could have been dangerous above consequential terrain. Moderate gusting to high winds were sustained the entire day and wind slabs were widespread in the backcountry terrain north of Bridger.
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We saw most terrain in the motorized area north of Cooke City. We went passed Round Lake to Goose Lake wilderness boundary, around the north of Sheep Mtn. and Scotch Bonnet to Lulu Pass, out to Mt. Abundance, back south over Daisy Pass, and around town hill/Miller Rd., then up and down Sheep Creek to the top.
Skies were clear and wind was calm to non-existent with cold temperatures (singles to teens F).
We saw a handful (4-6?) of old wind slab avalanches of various ages. The most recent and largest appearing, but still not very fresh, was on the north side of Scotch Bonnet (attached photo). Most were D1-D1.5, the slide pictured was D2.
We dug on the southeast shoulder of Mt. Abundance (profile attached). Snow depth was 3.5-4 feet and we had ECTNs. There were some soft-ish facets near the bottom of the snowpack. We also dug a pit in Sheep Creek and had an ECTX, snow depth of 4-5 feet. We did a lot of hand pits to look for recently buried facets. Small sugary facets were generally easy to find, buried 3-6" deep below soft snow. If and where snow is drifted into thicker slabs, these facets might make those slabs more reactive.
A lack of recent avalanches combined with minimal recent loading from new snow and wind point to avalanches being unlikely. The recent large persistent slab in Hayden Creek shows that although slides are unlikely they could be big. We would rule-out big slopes that are heavily wind-loaded, and otherwise feel ok in steep terrain while sticking to safe travel protocols (carry a transceiver, probe AND shovel, and only expose one person at a time to avalanche terrain).
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We skied north from Texas Meadows to the Playground. Strong southerly winds were actively building wind slabs up to 25 cm deep in immediate lees at treeline. We experienced a few instances of cracking in this wind slab, propagating 2 or 3 meters from our ski tips.
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Attempting to ski the Hellmouth The snowpack appeared very stable on most aspects, however when dropping into the northwest face of Alex Lowe peak up and lookers left from the couloir the snowpack was extremely wind scoured. There was maybe 6 inches of un compacted facets below two inches of wind slab. Slightly farther down slope the snow became deep enough for me to put in several jump turns on ski belay. After coming off belay I skied forward maybe 5 feet and broke off a wind slab around 20 feet wide and five feet below me. Shifting my weight right after that the snow below me also broke and slid away. After that I booted back to the ridge and we safely descended the south east face.
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While touring today, we saw a deep slab avalanche at the southern end of the Hayden Creek drainage. NE aspect. It seemed to be recent, likely in the last day or so.
Full Snow Observation ReportHere are our observations from Cooke City today. Our plan was to tour up the south side of Miller Mountain as far as we felt comfortable. Winds were mostly calm during the day, and temperatures were darn-right cold all day, even on southerly aspects. It was -26F when we pulled into town.
The sheep creek drainage had a lot of evidence of prior wind transport, most non-sheltered aspects had textured snow. We dug a pit at 9600’, HS was 190cm! At 150cm above the ground, we encountered a 1cm thick melt-freeze crust with small facets forming over it’s surface. We also noted 4-finger basal facets all the way at the ground.
Our ECT produced nothing terribly remarkable. ECTN25 and ECTN26 on the melt-freeze crust. It could be a layer to look out for in the near-future. The snow above treeline began to stiffen, so we ripped skins around 10k feet and had a lovely ski down.
1 to 3 inches of new snow on top of a very hard base nearly every where with evidence of past wind affect. Condition were Sunny with calm winds and temperatures in the single digits. we saw no avalanche activity cause by snowmobilers or people actively skiing the Hollywood wall. Lots of people around.
Full Snow Observation ReportIt was a beautiful, cold, clear-few, morning with very little wind.
HS ~140cm on an E/SE aspect at 7500'. HN24 of ~10-20cm between 7500-8500'. HN is light and unconsolidated with no evidence of wind transport. A thin, breakable MF crust was observed in similar elv. bands in east-facing trees below the new snow. Two hand shears had planar results on this layer but snow above the crust did not have slabby characteristics. No cracking or collapsing was observed. L-ASc-R1-D1-I sluffs occurred while skiing.
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