Trip Planning for Cooke City Area

as of 5:00 am
Mar 130″ | 23-41 SW
Mar 11 0″ | 20-45 SW
Mar 10 0″ | 15-50 SW
10020′     03/13 at 23:00
19.5℉
NW - 9mph
Gusts 17 mph
9100′     03/13 at 23:00
22℉
73″ Depth
Primary Problem: Wind Slab
Bottom Line: In areas closer to Big Sky, snow has already started, and strong south winds will be forming shallow wind slabs. In areas further north, not much snow may fall until after winds start dying down and there will be minimal wind slab formation.

Past 5 Days

Sun Mar 9

Low
Mon Mar 10

Low
Tue Mar 11

Low
Wed Mar 12

Low
Thu Mar 13

Moderate

Relevant Avalanche Activity

Cooke City
Miller Ridge
Wet Loose Avalanches, W Miller Ridge
Miller Ridge
WL-N
Elevation: 9,500
Aspect: SW
Coordinates: 45.0423, -109.9650
Caught: 0 ; Buried: 0

Today we observed wet loose avalanches in steep, rocky terrain on the west side of Miller ridge. SW facing, 9500 ft

 


More Avalanche Details
Cooke City
Crown Butte
Wind slab avalanche north of Crown Butte
Incident details include images
Crown Butte
SS-R2-D2-I
Elevation: 9,600
Aspect: N
Coordinates: 45.0556, -109.9610
Caught: 0 ; Buried: 0

Fresh wind slab avalanche seen this afternoon, possibly rider triggered.


More Avalanche Details
Cooke City
Miller Mtn.
Rider buried near Cooke City, close call
Miller Mtn.
HS-AMu
Coordinates: 45.0465, -109.9770
Caught: 0 ; Buried: 0

We received a call (from a third party) about a snowmobiler that was buried with their head 5 feet below the snow and their foot sticking out of the snow. Their partners saw the foot and dug them out. The riders face was blue, but quickly became responsive after a "chest thump". 

They were riding on the north side of Miller Mtn. Given the widespread winds and drifting, we suspect it was likely a hard wind slab avalanche similar to one spotted on Crown Butte the same day .


More Avalanche Details

Relevant Photos

Displaying 1 - 40
  • We also witnessed a falling cornice today that washed some snow through rocks. Be aware of what's above you.

     

  • Above Goose Creek -hard, dense, strong, and deep snow. Facets from late January are 1F+ hardness

  • Fresh wind slab avalanche seen this afternoon, possibly rider triggered. Photo: N. Meyers

  • On Feb 24 we saw at least 3 rider triggered wind slabs, 4-5 natural wind slab avalanches, and a couple large cornice falls. Strong wid had affected almost every piece of terrain, scouring some slopes, loading others, just stiffening the slab in many areas, and forming fresh drifts on every convex roll and along the edges of trails. Riding was still soft and fairly consistent in many areas. Photo GNFAC

  • On Feb 24 we saw at least 3 rider triggered wind slabs, 4-5 natural wind slab avalanches, and a couple large cornice falls. Strong wid had affected almost every piece of terrain, scouring some slopes, loading others, just stiffening the slab in many areas, and forming fresh drifts on every convex roll and along the edges of trails. Riding was still soft and fairly consistent in many areas. Photo GNFAC

  • On Feb 24 we saw at least 3 rider triggered wind slabs, 4-5 natural wind slab avalanches, and a couple large cornice falls. Strong wid had affected almost every piece of terrain, scouring some slopes, loading others, just stiffening the slab in many areas, and forming fresh drifts on every convex roll and along the edges of trails. Riding was still soft and fairly consistent in many areas. Photo GNFAC

  • On Feb 24 we saw at least 3 rider triggered wind slabs, 4-5 natural wind slab avalanches, and a couple large cornice falls. Strong wid had affected almost every piece of terrain, scouring some slopes, loading others, just stiffening the slab in many areas, and forming fresh drifts on every convex roll and along the edges of trails. Riding was still soft and fairly consistent in many areas. Photo GNFAC

  • On Feb 24 we saw at least 3 rider triggered wind slabs, 4-5 natural wind slab avalanches, and a couple large cornice falls. Strong wid had affected almost every piece of terrain, scouring some slopes, loading others, just stiffening the slab in many areas, and forming fresh drifts on every convex roll and along the edges of trails. Riding was still soft and fairly consistent in many areas. Photo GNFAC

  • On Feb 24 we saw at least 3 rider triggered wind slabs, 4-5 natural wind slab avalanches, and a couple large cornice falls. Strong wid had affected almost every piece of terrain, scouring some slopes, loading others, just stiffening the slab in many areas, and forming fresh drifts on every convex roll and along the edges of trails. Riding was still soft and fairly consistent in many areas. Photo GNFAC

     

  • While looking for a recent avalanche from the flat bench above we triggered a similar sized slide directly adjacent to the previous slide. They broke on weak layers of facets and surface hoar that formed at the end of January. 2-3 feet deep and 150-200' wide. Photo: GNFAC

  • While looking for a recent avalanche from the flat bench above we triggered a similar sized slide directly adjacent to the previous slide. They broke on weak layers of facets and surface hoar that formed at the end of January. 2-3 feet deep and 150-200' wide. Observing the snowpack that caused the avalanche. Photo: GNFAC

  • While looking for a recent avalanche from the flat bench above we triggered a similar sized slide directly adjacent to the previous slide. They broke on weak layers of facets and surface hoar that formed at the end of January. 2-3 feet deep and 150-200' wide. Photo: GNFAC

  • While looking for a recent avalanche from the flat bench above we triggered a similar sized slide directly adjacent to the previous slide. They broke on weak layers of facets and surface hoar that formed at the end of January. 2-3 feet deep and 150-200' wide. Photo: GNFAC

  • While looking for a recent avalanche from the flat bench above we triggered a similar sized slide directly adjacent to the previous slide. They broke on weak layers of facets and surface hoar that formed at the end of January. 2-3 feet deep and 150-200' wide. Photo: GNFAC

     

  • An avalanche that was triggered two days ago (Feb 22), remotely from flat terrain above a steep slope, on the northeast end of Mt. Abundance. Photo: GNFAC

  • A rider triggered a small avalanche near Lulu Pass. No one was caught in the slide. Photo: N. Gaddy

  • A rider triggered a small avalanche near Lulu Pass. No one was caught in the slide. Photo: N. Gaddy

  • On Feb 23 We went up Republic Creek to look at the stability of snow that has fallen over the last 2-3 weeks. We were able to easily to trigger a couple wind slab avalanches on test slopes. Photo: GNFAC

  • On Feb 23 We went up Republic Creek to look at the stability of snow that has fallen over the last 2-3 weeks. We were able to easily to trigger a couple wind slab avalanches on test slopes. Photo: GNFAC

  • On Feb 23 We went up Republic Creek to look at the stability of snow that has fallen over the last 2-3 weeks. We found a thin layer buried 2’ deep that showed potential to propagate and slide. We dug down 4 feet, just below the dirt layer that was deposited earlier this month. We got an ECTP30 that broke about 8" above that dirt layer. This was either on a thin layer of facets or preserved lower density dendrites. Photo: GNFAC

  • Today we observed a couple day old wind slabs in steep SW facing terrain on Mt Zimmer. Photo: BPG

     

  • Wet loose occurred sometime today between 11-2 pm on S facing terrain nearby. Photo: BPG 

     

  • Skier in Republic Creek observed a natural (wind/storm slab) avalanche on an east aspect at ~9200ft. Photo: R. Minton

  • I could visibly see some layer distinction about 8-12” deep. This is the same weakish layer we found in our column test, where we got ect16 just below robs knob. This was on a north facing aspect. Photo: I Tuttle

  • In Hayden Creek, we saw many D1-D1.5 wind slab avalanches seen on leeward slopes- east and northeast slopes at and above treeline. Photo: N. Mattes (Beartooth Powder Guides)

  • In Hayden Creek, we saw many D1-D1.5 wind slab avalanches seen on leeward slopes- east and northeast slopes at and above treeline. Photo: N. Mattes (Beartooth Powder Guides)

  • In Hayden Creek, we saw many D1-D1.5 wind slab avalanches seen on leeward slopes- east and northeast slopes at and above treeline. Photo: N. Mattes (Beartooth Powder Guides)

  • In Hayden Creek, we saw many D1-D1.5 wind slab avalanches seen on leeward slopes- east and northeast slopes at and above treeline. Photo: N. Mattes (Beartooth Powder Guides)

  • Noticed a large cornice triggered avalanche on Mineral Mtn today. Likely broke on 2/12 or early am 2/13. E aspect ran almost to the valley floor.  Photo: BPG

  • Saw what looked to be a small wind slab or cornice fall on South Siren in Republic Creek. SE facing, 10100 ft. Photo: BPG

  • Saw a few wind slabs. Some appeared to be skier triggered, some were natural. Photo: BPG

  • Saw a few wind slabs. Some appeared to be skier triggered, some were natural. Photo: BPG

  • On Feb 9 we watched two snowboarders trigger separate wind slabs, while riding one at a time in avalanche terrain, on the south side of Scotch Bonnet. Photo: J. Mancey

     

  • On Feb 9 we watched two snowboarders trigger separate wind slabs, while riding one at a time in avalanche terrain, on the south side of Scotch Bonnet. Photo: GNFAC

  • On Feb 9 we saw a fresh natural wind slab near Wolverine, R1-D1.5. Photo: GNFAC

     

  • Saw this small soft slab above Round Lake today. SE facing, 9500 ft. Likely skier triggered, there were lots of ski tracks on that hill. Photo: J Mundt

  • A little wind load cornice break, but it broke while I was coming down that track to the right. Photo: S Strenge

  • This is the N side of scotch bonnet, looks like a big break, didn’t get any closer than this however. Photo: S Strenge

     

  • N face of crown butte, looks like it slid before the dirt event (we think the end of the storm yesterday/ or last night must have been dirty snow?). Photo: S Strenge

  • Avalanche east aspect of Henderson. This slid sometime between 11:30 - 12:30 on 2/4/24. Photo: BPG

     

Videos- Cooke City Area

WebCams


Soda Butte Lodge, looking West

Soda Butte Lodge, looking East

Snowpit Profiles- Cooke City Area

 

Select a snowpit on the map to view the profile image

Weather Forecast Cooke City Area

Extended Forecast for

2 Miles NNE Cooke City MT

  • Overnight

    Overnight: Snow.  Low around 18. West southwest wind 8 to 10 mph becoming northwest.  Chance of precipitation is 100%. Total nighttime snow accumulation of around 3 inches.

    Low: 18 °F

    Snow

  • Friday

    Friday: A 50 percent chance of snow.  Mostly cloudy, with a high near 25. West wind 10 to 16 mph.  New snow accumulation of less than one inch possible.

    High: 25 °F

    Chance Snow

  • Friday Night

    Friday Night: A 40 percent chance of snow, mainly before midnight.  Mostly cloudy, with a low around 15. West southwest wind 7 to 14 mph.  New snow accumulation of less than a half inch possible.

    Low: 15 °F

    Chance Snow

  • Saturday

    Saturday: Snow likely, mainly after noon.  Mostly cloudy, with a high near 26. West southwest wind 8 to 14 mph.  Chance of precipitation is 70%. New snow accumulation of around an inch possible.

    High: 26 °F

    Slight Chance
    Snow then
    Snow Likely

  • Saturday Night

    Saturday Night: Snow likely, mainly before midnight.  Mostly cloudy, with a low around 17. West southwest wind 14 to 16 mph.  Chance of precipitation is 70%. New snow accumulation of around 2 inches.

    Low: 17 °F

    Snow Likely

  • Sunday

    Sunday: Snow likely, mainly after noon.  Patchy blowing snow after noon. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 31. West southwest wind 15 to 23 mph, with gusts as high as 45 mph.  Chance of precipitation is 60%. New snow accumulation of around 3 inches.

    High: 31 °F

    Snow Likely
    and Patchy
    Blowing Snow

  • Sunday Night

    Sunday Night: A 50 percent chance of snow.  Patchy blowing snow. Mostly cloudy, with a low around 28. Southwest wind 20 to 24 mph, with gusts as high as 47 mph.  New snow accumulation of around 2 inches.

    Low: 28 °F

    Chance Snow
    and Patchy
    Blowing Snow

  • Monday

    Monday: Snow.  Patchy blowing snow. High near 34. Southwest wind 18 to 22 mph, with gusts as high as 41 mph.  Chance of precipitation is 80%.

    High: 34 °F

    Snow and
    Patchy
    Blowing Snow

  • Monday Night

    Monday Night: Snow.  Patchy blowing snow before 9pm. Low around 19. West southwest wind 7 to 17 mph becoming northwest after midnight.  Chance of precipitation is 80%.

    Low: 19 °F

    Snow and
    Patchy
    Blowing Snow

The Last Word

03 / 12 / 25  <<  
 
this forecast
 
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