Wasatch
Cache National Forest
In partnership with: Utah Division of State
Parks and Recreation, The Friends of the Utah Avalanche Center, Utah Department
of Emergency Services and Homeland Security and Salt Lake County.
Òkeeping you on topÓ
AVALANCHE ADVISORY
Monday, April 28, 2008
Hello, this is Bruce Tremper with the Forest Service Utah Avalanche Center and
this is our end-of-season message.
Our money has run out and we have ended
avalanche advisories for the 2007-08 season. This does not mean the end of avalanches. It just means that we have to draw the
line somewhere and the end of April is where we usually do it.
Also, spring conditions tend to be much more predictable than winter and our
advisories tend to sound like a broken record after awhile. (Does anyone even remember what a
broken record used to sound like?)
So here are a few boilerplate suggestions for dealing with typical
spring conditions:
In spring, we usually have a clockwork-like alternation between snow storms
followed by rapid warming and wet sluffs on steep, sun exposed slopes. Thus, your strategy has to rapidly
adjust between one of two different avalanche dragons.
Storm Snow:
First, every time we get a fresh snowstorm
you will need to deal with all the usual problems of storm snow such as wind slabs
and weak layers within the new snow.
As always, you should avoid any slope steeper than about 35 degrees with
recent deposits of wind drifted snow.
They will usually look smooth and rounded and they usually feel ÒslabbyÓ
meaning that harder snow lies on top of softer snow. You will often find them
in upper elevation, above-tree-line terrain especially near ridges. In spring, these wind slabs are often
short-lived because warm temperatures usually settle them out quickly.
Also, you need to carefully check for weak layers within the new snow even in
non-wind loaded snow. Often spring
storms will precipitate graupel, that pellet snow that looks like little
Styrofoam balls, which behave like little ball bearings. Also, even on non-wind
loaded slopes, lighter density snow can also be a weak layer during storms. Again, these instabilities often occur
just during or immediately after the storms and settle out quickly in the warm
temperatures.
HereÕs how you deal with storm snow instabilities: jump on lots of small test
slopes to see how well the new snow is bonded, simply dig down with your hand
to cut out a little square of snow and pull on it. Finally, never jump into a slope without first putting in a
good slope cut. Build up your
speed and cut across the slope at about a 45 degree angle aimed at an island of
safety so that if the slab does break, in theory, your momentum will take you
off the moving slab into safer terrain.
Wet avalanches:
The second avalanche problem will be wet
avalanches as the snow gets soggy in the strong spring sun and warmer
temperatures. New, dry, cold snow
will almost always turn to wet sluffs in a hurry as soon as the sun hits it for
the first time. As a precursor,
you will usually see roller balls or pinwheels in the new snow as it gets damp,
which will later turn into larger, more dangerous, wet sluffs. Normally these sluffs are ÒmanageableÓ
unless one takes you into trees, rocks, over a cliff or into a narrow
gully. People usually get into
trouble in a couple of ways.
First, they start out in dry snow up high and descend into wetter and
wetter snow and before you know it, youÕve gotten yourself into a pickle. Second, they simply stay out too late
in the day. The name of the game
in spring is to start early and head home early.
You can also get into trouble with wet avalanches even in older, ÒcornÓ
snow—snow that has melted and frozen several times to form larger,
grained snow. Many snow
connoisseurs live for corn snow, that baby-butt smooth, refrozen surface, which
I also call ÒnatureÕs groomers.Ó
The trick is to carefully watch the overnight temperatures to make sure
the snow surface has refrozen.
With cloudy overnight sky, you will need below freezing temperatures,
but with a clear sky, combined with dry air, the snow surface can freeze even
with overnight lows of around 38 degrees. (See links below for Internet
links.) Next, you have to catch it
just after the sun has softened up the surface enough so itÕs not chattery and
icy but before the sun has completely turned it to breakable mush. ItÕs a fine art, really. You need to start out on east facing
slopes in the early morning, switch to south facing at mid morning and west
faces by late morning. After noon,
you definitely need to be headed home, first, because there is the danger of
wet sluffs and second, because your deep tracks in mushy snow will freeze into
something resembling concrete traffic barriers and ruin the surface for others
the next morning.
Finally, each spring, like clockwork, we get very large, ÒglideÓ
avalanches on steep rock slabs especially in places like Broads Fork and Stairs
gulch in Big Cottonwood Canyon.
They occur when meltwater lubricates the interface between the rock slab
and the snow and then entire snowpack moves very slowly like a glacier for
several days until it releases catastrophically in a huge avalanche. These can occur any time of day or
night. So in other words, just
avoid the slopes below these big glide cracks in the more radical, steep
terrain.
Unfortunately, this spring, weÕve had two major dust storms, which put a thin
layer of brown dust on the snow surface, so the snow will probably get much
more sun cupped than usual, it will melt faster and it may produce more wet
avalanche problems than usual. So
be especially careful with the first major, prolonged warm up we have this
spring.
Mountain Weather:
We have an embarrassment of riches for
mountain weather products on the web.
Here is a list of links that I regularly consult for mountain weather
information:
Alta
Forecast Graph (A wonderful forecast graph from the National Weather
Service. This may be the only
product you will need.)
48-hour Weather
Observations (This is a compilation of the past 48 hour temperature, wind
and snow from all the automated weather stations—a php script written by
our own Brett Kobernik.)
Penn State Weather
(Good weather forecast maps you can loop through.)
University of
Utah Weather (The Theta-e time-height is especially powerful if you know
how to read it.)
Alta
Public Forecast (The good-old, non-technical, forecast for those who want a
general summary in plain English and icons.)
Announcements:
We still want to know about any avalanche
activity you see, especially if someone is caught, so please leave us a message
at (801) 524-5304 or 1-800-662-4140, or email us at uac@avalanche.org. (Fax 801-524-6301)
The information in this advisory is from the U.S. Forest Service, which is
solely responsible for its content.
This advisory describes general avalanche conditions and local
variations always occur.
Thanks for a great season and we will be back around the first of November.