Northwest Avalanche Center

Observation: Public

All Observations

Observation Details

Name:
Matthew Calbraith Crisler
Observation Date:
December 12, 2020
Submitted:
December 12, 2020
Zone or Region:
West South
Activity:
Skiing/Snowboarding
Location:
Mount Rainier - Paradise, Mazama Ridge, Golden Gates

Triggered Avalanches

Did you trigger any avalanches? 
Yes
Was it intentional? 
No
Avalanche Type:
Dry Loose (Sluff)
Size:
Size 1: Relatively harmless to people
Elevation:
6000
Aspect:
SE
Comments:
A number of loose dry avalanches were triggered on the S, SE facing slopes on the upper section of Mazama Ridge. These ran relatively far and entrained all the new snow down to the rain crust. We triggered an additional loose dry on one of these slopes.
Photo:

Observed Avalanches

Did you observe any avalanches? 
Yes
Avalanche Type:
Dry Loose (Sluff)
Size:
Size 1: Relatively harmless to people
Elevation:
6000
Aspect:
SE
Comments:
See above
Photo:

Signs of Unstable Snow

None reported

Observations

Although loose dry avalanches were possible to trigger, they were limited to quite steep start zones, but ran far and entrained additional snow on the crust. We observed widespread surface hoar in the morning on all aspects and throughout the 4200'-6000+ elevation band we skiied. By the end of the day, the sun seemed to eliminate most of this on S, SE, SW facing slopes, but as of 2PM it was still present on flat and shaded slopes.

Winds throughout the day were significant at ridge tops, but nearly calm at slightly lower elevations. Some snow transport was observed at the ridge tops moving snow East to West onto Mazama Ridge and North to South onto golden gates with winds appearing to increase from noon-2PM. Wind transport appeared to be limited to just under ridge tops and relatively small amounts of snow.

Media

Ridge top winds blowing East to West onto Mazama Ridge
Surface hoar in the morning on South facing aspect on Stevens Canyon road
Winds were mostly isolated to ridge tops with wind effects showing only for the upper 30-50' of the slope.
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