Northwest Avalanche Center

Observation: Public

All Observations

Observation Details

Name:
Mike Rolfs
Observation Date:
February 4, 2021
Submitted:
February 4, 2021
Zone or Region:
East Central
Activity:
Skiing/Snowboarding
Location:
In Bounds Mission Ridge

Triggered Avalanches

Did you trigger any avalanches? 
Yes
Was it intentional? 
No
Avalanche Type:
Soft Slab
Size:
Size 1: Relatively harmless to people
Elevation:
Near treeline
Aspect:
NW
Comments:
6" soft slab triggered by first turn on wind deposited snow in a chute that accesses bowl 4 in the Mission Ridge Ski area. Snowboarder caught and carried a short distance but escaped uphill. Avalanche ran 100 feet resulting in a 12" soft fanned out debris pile

Observed Avalanches

Did you observe any avalanches? 
Yes
Avalanche Type:
Soft Slab
Size:
Size 2: Could bury, injure, or kill a person
Elevation:
NTL
Aspect:
N
Comments:
Since Saturday, there have been 4 in-bounds avalanches at Mission Ridge. I got personal accounts for three of them, and 2nd hand info on the fourth. These have occurred at all aspects and include:
Saturday, Jan30, chute 4, ntl, skier triggered, caught and carried. East aspect
Sunday, Jan 31, bowl 5, ntl, skier triggered, 18" crown. East aspect (See obs report of 1/31 titled Mission Ridge - https://nwac.us/public-obs/20210131_mission-ridge/)
Tuesday, Feb 2, Chair 2 Chair line, ntl, N aspect, 48" crown, skier triggered, bystander caught and carried. No injury. Soft debris
Thursday, Feb 4, Bowl 4 entry chute, NW aspect, 6" crown, skier triggered but escaped. Soft debris - the subject of this report
Photo:

Signs of Unstable Snow

None reported

Observations

I believe these avalanches are occurring in locations where the wind deposits snow gently over a slippery surface. (similar to my 1/9 avalanche report -https://nwac.us/public-obs/20210109_east-of-mission-ridge/). Without lift access to the top of Mission Ridge this year, Mission Ridge's upper mountain snow-pack is natural and mostly undisturbed for the first time in 55 years. Our institutional memory about which spots are dangerous and which are safe is faulty because we don't have experience in this terrain with a natural snow-pack. Avalanches are occurring in surprising locations. If touring in bounds at Mission Ridge, we should adjust our alert level, and treat the terrain as if it is our first visit ever and evaluate every slope with a critical eye.

Media

4 foot crown from Tuesday's chairline avalanche
This bystander was taking photos when the Tuesday avalanche was triggered by another skier. He fell uphill of the sliding soft slab onto the bed surface and slid down the bed surface just behing the moving snow. Came to rest among large soft slab chunks.
Photo from the crown showing crack extending west.
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