Beautiful day! Clear skies, cool temperatures, and a very light breeze.
# | Date | Location | Size | Type | Bed Sfc | Depth | Trigger | Photos | Details |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 |
Jan 29, 2023 () |
Mt St Helens S 4496ft |
D2 R2 |
HS-Hard Slab | I-New/Old Interface | 2ft | N-Natural | Report | |
1 |
Jan 30, 2023 2:30 am () |
Mt St Helens S 4000ft |
D2 R2 |
HS-Hard Slab | 1.5ft |
AS-Skier u-Unintentional |
Report |
Other than the two avalanches we recorded we did not see any other slides.
Wind: The strong winds from the weekend wreaked havoc on Mt St Helens. Many slopes above 4500ft were scoured down to a very firm (and sometimes icy) crust. The few wind-loaded pockets that remained were often in deep gullies or on the W sides of sharp ridges. These "softer" pockets were large textured features (sastrugi, see photo below).
At mid elevations (5000-4000ft), wind slabs were much easier to find. They were often on unusual aspects like the two avalanches (SSW). However, we also found them on the E and SE sides of features. Slabs were frequently hard and up to 3-4ft thick.
Below 4000ft, several inches (3-6in 7-15cm) of soft snow sat over a robust crust. This made for fun, fast travel on lower angled slopes.
Despite the sunshine, we did not see any significant signs of wet surface snow developing during the day.
Problem | Location | Distribution | Sensitivity | Size | Comments |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Wind Slab |
|
Layer Depth/Date: 2-48in |