Northwest Avalanche Center

Observation: Public

All Observations

Observation Details

Name:
Enji Cooper
Observation Date:
January 29, 2022
Submitted:
January 29, 2022
Zone or Region:
Snoqualmie Pass
Activity:
XC Skiing/Snowshoeing
Location:
Granite/Low Mountain

Triggered Avalanches

Did you trigger any avalanches? 
Yes
Was it intentional? 
No
Avalanche Type:
Soft Slab
Size:
Size 1: Relatively harmless to people
Elevation:
5300
Aspect:
NE
Comments:
Triggered some touchy soft slab issues mid-afternoon along the ridge to Low Mt. The soft slab was around cornices and seemed like soft wind slabs/fetch. Broke in a semi-planar way

Observed Avalanches

Did you observe any avalanches? 
Yes
Avalanche Type:
Wet Loose
Size:
Size 4: Could destroy a railway car, large truck, several buildings, or a substantial amount of forest
Elevation:
5600
Aspect:
SW
Comments:
Observed old D3.5 avalanche off the SW face of Chair Peak (by upper Melakwa Lake), starting from the upper “death gully” (SW face). The slide had gone a couple thousand feet down by the lake.

Signs of Unstable Snow

Did you see shooting cracks? 
Yes, Isolated
Did you experience collapsing or whumpfing? 
No

Observations

Morning was firm/icy conditions. Could barely get purchase with boots off bootpack (bootpack was pure ice). Snow had softened under trees by mid-morning. Very little postholing, but some. Snow above 4.5k’ along lower ridge was difficult to purchase with crampons and ice axe spike in late morning.

Encountered a bit of fetch descending the ridge down on the east side of Denny Lake. The stuff underneath was hard freeze crust.

Snow softened up further by midday on S facing aspects. Snowshoe crampons had some difficulty biting crust underneath (kept on wanting to slide). Saw cornices on N and E face of ridge on the way around the lake and up the ridge.

The ridge had been heavily impacted by solar input. This made for excellent safe travel in the afternoon booting and using crampons.

Triggered some surface layer soft slabs with my crampons returning on ridge. Soft slabs broke in a planar manner and the issue had isolated propagation. I doubt this layer will be a long term problem with the incoming forecasted snow.

The way down to the lakeside was more punchy with crampons. The way up the ridge was slippery with snowshoes.

Did some tele-snowshoeing down the ridge back to the bootpath. Snow was very corny.

Areas below 4.3k’ which had large degree of solar input were hot garbage in the afternoon (15:00+). I was postholing extensively, sometimes straight to ground (2’). The surface snow is very sugary/smashed potatoes like.

Media

Public Field Report: Granite/Low Mountain
Public Field Report: Granite/Low Mountain
Public Field Report: Granite/Low Mountain
Public Field Report: Granite/Low Mountain
Public Field Report: Granite/Low Mountain
Public Field Report: Granite/Low Mountain
Public Field Report: Granite/Low Mountain
Public Field Report: Granite/Low Mountain

Advanced Observations

Observed Avalanche Problem #1: 
Cornice
Comments: 
Observed a number of cornices on N and E aspects, likely caused by W winds over the past few weeks. Several older cornices had failed, but there were some that hadn’t yet.
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