22-23
Wind slabs up high in Beehive
A skier triggered a small (D1) wind slab near the top of the Peruvian. Roughly 1ft deep and 20ft wide.
Wind slabs up high in Beehive
A skier triggered a small (D1) wind slab near the top of the Peruvian. Roughly 1ft deep and 20ft wide.
GNFAC Avalanche Forecast for Fri Apr 28, 2023
<p>On Thursday, the mountains received 1-5” of new snow, favoring Hyalite Canyon and the areas near West Yellowstone and Cooke City. Expect this snow to shed from steep slopes as it gets wet under a warm spring sun later Friday morning. Small, wet snow avalanches pack a punch and can easily knock a skier or rider off their feet and push them into obstacles. Move to cooler aspects (or to dry trails, rivers, and rocks) when the snow surface gets wet or when you see the first signs of instability, such as roller balls or avalanche activity. Look at the <a href="https://www.mtavalanche.com/node/29157"><strong><span>photos of recent wet snow avalanches</span></strong></a> at Bridger Bowl for an example of what will likely occur.<span> </span></p>
<p>This weekend, it will get <em>hot</em>. Daytime mountain temperatures in the 50s and 60s F will last well into next week, with nighttime temperatures remaining above freezing in most areas outside of West Yellowstone and Cooke City. The likelihood and potential size of wet snow avalanches will increase through the weekend and next week. The weakening of the snowpack will start superficially and progress deeper as the melt intensifies. We may see large and destructive wet-slab avalanches before the next solid freeze.</p>
<p>The travel advice and snowpack assessment for wet snow instabilities are relatively simple. Conditions are generally stable if the snow surface has a strong, supportable crust. As the crust breaks down, conditions are destabilizing. Be off and out from under steep terrain by the time you sink into wet, sloppy snow more than a few inches deep. <em>With temperatures remaining above freezing, we may not get the stable portion of this diurnal cycle in all areas</em>.</p>
<p>Don’t neglect your exit strategy from the mountains. Slopes in lower elevations will become unstable earlier than in upper elevations and north-facing terrain. I’ve been forced to consider alternative exits in the past as I traveled back through lower elevations, feeling foolish as I realized that I’d been trapped by wet snow and poor planning. Additionally, give cornices along ridgelines a wide berth and avoid slopes below them as they are known to collapse this time of year (<a href="https://www.mtavalanche.com/images/23/cornice-fall-mount-abundance"><st…. Abundance</span></strong></a>, <a href="https://www.mtavalanche.com/images/23/giant-cornice-collapse-north-madi… Madison Range</span></strong></a>).</p>
<p>This is our final regular spring bulletin of the season. Have a safe and fun spring wherever your adventures take you.</p>
<p><span>We will continue to share relevant avalanche and snowpack information on our website, social media and in special bulletins as necessary. If you get out, please send us your observations, no matter how brief. You can submit them via our website, email (mtavalanche@gmail.com), phone (406-587-6984), or Instagram (#gnfacobs).</span></p>
<p><span>Wet snow avalanches are the primary concern in the Centennial Mountains. The weakening of the snowpack will start superficially and progress deeper as the melt intensifies this weekend. Wet snow avalanches will likely increase in frequency and size. Conditions are generally stable if the snow surface has a supportable crust. As the crust breaks down, conditions are destabilizing. Be off and out from under steep terrain by the time you sink into wet, sloppy snow more than a few inches deep.</span></p>
Info and Reminders
We are updating our avalanche and weather log daily and posting relevant changes to the avalanche conditions so you can track the weather and how it affects the snowpack.
Weather and Avalanche Log for Thu Apr 27, 2023
SNOTEL is not reporting. 0" precip based on operational weather stations and forecast
Large Wet Slides at Bridger
Saw a number of large wet slides at Bridger Bowl the morning of 4/26. One running deep into North Bowl, and a couple other large slides in Bridger Gully coming off the ridge. These seemed to be recent -- likely from the past 48 hours.
Obs. 4/26/23: "Saw a number of large wet slides at Bridger Bowl the morning of 4/26. One running deep into North Bowl, and a couple other large slides in Bridger Gully coming off the ridge. These seemed to be recent -- likely from the past 48 hours." Photo: K. Gordon
Forecast link: GNFAC Avalanche Forecast for Fri Apr 28, 2023
From obs. 4/26/23: "Saw a number of large wet slides at Bridger Bowl the morning of 4/26. One running deep into North Bowl, and a couple other large slides in Bridger Gully coming off the ridge. These seemed to be recent -- likely from the past 48 hours." Photo: K. Gordon
Forecast link: GNFAC Avalanche Forecast for Fri Apr 28, 2023GNFAC Avalanche Forecast for Tue May 2, 2023
Large Wet Slides at Bridger
Saw a number of large wet slides at Bridger Bowl the morning of 4/26. One running deep into North Bowl, and a couple other large slides in Bridger Gully coming off the ridge. These seemed to be recent -- likely from the past 48 hours.