Northwest Avalanche Center

Observation: Public

All Observations

Observation Details

Name:
Connor D Stolfa
Observation Date:
April 30, 2023
Submitted:
May 1, 2023
Zone or Region:
Snoqualmie Pass
Activity:
Skiing/Snowboarding
Location:
Red Mountain (Commonwealth Basin)

Observed Avalanches

Did you observe any avalanches? 
Yes
Avalanche Type:
Wet Slab
Size:
Size 2: Could bury, injure, or kill a person
Elevation:
4800
Aspect:
S
Comments:
Avalanches covered the entire southern half of the compass. We observed them on S, SE, and SW faces. Given the area we were in, we could not get a good look at Northern aspects.

When we started the tour at 6 AM, the snow was reasonably firm, but around 8:00-8:30AM, we started to observe that the Snow was sluffing beneath our skis as we navigated the switchbacks through the trees on the ridge up to Red Pond. Our original goal was to summit Red Mountain if conditions were safe, but this sluffing prompted us to change our plans and we decided to turn around at the base of Red instead. The sluffing naturally got worse as it warmed, but it remained present even as we gained elevation. The warming from the weekend was every bit as widespread as the avalanche bulletin predicted.

Signs of Unstable Snow

None reported

Observations

The warm weather did exactly what it was expected to do. We observed numerous avalanches that appeared to be either wet slab or wet loose.

My friend and I skinned up through the Commonwealth Basin to the base of Red Mountain. Along the way we observed several slides from a distance out and one from the ridge above the slide path (pictured). They appear to have been wet slabs that ran the day before. The snow was reasonably firm from 6:00AM to about 8:30 AM, when it started to rapidly soften. Our hope was to get to the top of Red Mountain and see if conditions were safe enough to ski the SW face. This would have required near freezing temperatures combined with windchill to produce a crust that could soften into corn. It became increasingly clear that this hadn't happened. We were navigating the treed ridge up to Red Pond around 8:30 when snow began to sluff aggressively out from under our skis on switchbacks. We also observed the previously mentioned D2 avalanche from the ridge of the gully that it ran through (pictured) and remained high on a ridge whenever possible as a result. These factors prompted us to decide to turn around at the base of Red Mountain. We continued to avoid avalanche terrain until we reached Red's base, where we unexpectedly found ourselves unnervingly close to the runout of a D2 avalanche that had run the day before (pictured). There were also 2 other D2 slides nearby that were clearly visible (pictured). We retreated to the dense nearby tree line beyond the reach of slide paths, transitioned, and skied down. While we could not

In retrospect, I wish that we'd hugged the tree line below Red Mountain more closely. Despite our efforts to avoid avalanche terrain, as we approached Red's base, we came into a clearing that clearly defined the limit of past slide paths. We should have immediately recognized this, but didn't until we rounded a bend and saw the avalanche mentioned above. There was less hazard overhead until we saw the avalanche, but this probably caused us to under appreciate the exposure of our position. Fortunately, nothing broke loose. Dense trees were not even 30 yards to our left. We should have remained in the trees or at least along them. It would have likely put us beyond the reach of must avalanches. As tempting as it can be to skin through a nice open glade, it's important not to loose sight of the hazards that you were watching for in the first place and wind up accidentally exposing yourself as we did.

Media

We came around the bend of Red Mountain and end up 20 yards from the base of this D2 slide. Likely a wet slab. There are 2 other slides visible in the background. Elevation 4800'.
An avalanche ran through a gully, visible from the Commonwealth trail's ridge line. Elevation 4000'.
Two more distant slides (visible in the first picture) that came down the SW face of Red Mountain. Elevation 4800'.
Slides visible in the distance on the SE face of Cave Ridge.
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