Northern Gallatin

Small Natural Avalanche, Flanders

Flanders Creek
Northern Gallatin
Code
SS-N-R2-D1
Aspect
E
Latitude
45.44020
Longitude
-110.93100
Notes

Climbers on the big sleep on Saturday reported strong wind and blowing snow. They witnessed a wind slab that broke above the climb, and estimated that it was large enough to bury, injure, or kill a person. 

From obs 2/5/22: "We hiked into Flanders to check out the Big Sleep ice climb. It was super windy with lots of blowing snow and the ice was thin so we decided not to climb it.

We witnessed a sizeable wind slab or sluff pour over the big sleep. It covered the whole climb for a second and probably would've slammed a climber off the route. Maybe 20 x 20 x 6 in slab but thats loose estimate."

Number of slides
1
Number caught
0
Number buried
0
Avalanche Type
Soft slab avalanche
Trigger
Natural trigger
R size
2
D size
1
Problem Type
Wind Slab
Slab Thickness units
centimeters
Single / Multiple / Red Flag
Single Avalanche
Advisory Year

Alex Lowe Peak

I toured out to Alex Lowe Peak today, and thought I’d share my observations. The wind was blowing fairly hard today, but was not transporting a great deal of snow anymore. I did not observe any natural activity, collapsing, or cracking, but there are some things to keep an eye on. A pit on an east aspect at 9500’ was 145cm deep, and an ECT failed at 12 on the new/old interface 15-20cm down. It would not propagate, and after 30 hits I tipped over the meter or so of column without it coming apart. The surface it bonded to is variable, though, so I would hesitate to make generalizations off of a single pit. 
Another observation worth noting is that standing in my snow pit, I sank pretty much to the ground in the weak, faceted, lower portion of the snowpack. I experienced this again stepping off my skis at 8200’ along south cottonwood creek, when I promptly sank to my thighs. I imagine some areas will react poorly to a substantial load, but that doesn’t seem to be in the forecast. 

Activity
Skiing
Date
Email
sam.reinsel@gmail.com
Latitude
45.43
Location (from list)
Title of your observation
Alex Lowe Peak
Longitude
-111.01
Observer Name
Sam Reinsel
Similar Regions
Share Snow Obs
On

Wind loading

I toured up to Divide today

the wind was still cooking and loading the east facing slopes

i did 3x stability tests (quick pits using my snow saw) as I gained the ridge towards the peak 

each pit receiving poor test scores, failed and propagated just below the new snow from this week 

i stuck to the sheltered lower angle trees 

 

I would not have trusted any wind loaded/loading slopes today 

 

on the way to the “pillow factory” I kicked off a very small harmless slide (photo attached)

this slide was on the same aspect and slope angle as the very small slide I kicked off yesterday (report submitted) just in a slightly different location 

Activity
Snowboarding
Date
Latitude
45.39
Location (from list)
Title of your observation
Wind loading
Longitude
-110.97
Similar Regions

From obs (2/4/22) on Divide Peak: "the wind was cooking for most of the day and each lap the skin track was covered in places. There was wind loading along the ridge the snow was pretty cohesive and wanted fracture and propagate but I was not surfing steep enough slopes for this to happen"

 

Northern Gallatin, 2022-02-04

Cohesive snow

I toured up to the East shoulder of divide to surf the 30 deg east facing slope

the wind was cooking for most of the day and each lap the skin track was covered in places

 

There was wind loading along the ridge 

the snow was pretty cohesive and wanted fracture and propagate but I was not surfing steep enough slopes for this to happen

 

On the way out a surfed over a steep roll over that fractured and slid 

it appeared to have slid on the new snow interface 

 

I would not have trusted any slopes that were getting loaded today 

 

attached are the photos 

 

Activity
Snowboarding
Date
Latitude
45.39
Location (from list)
Title of your observation
Cohesive snow
Longitude
-110.97
Similar Regions

Blackmore snow obs

Dug on Blackmore today. Aspect: 100 degrees. Elevation 9600 feet. Winds were moderate. HS 105cm. Concerning layer was Interface between older January snow and recent snow approx 92cm from the ground. This layer was very visible within the pit. Multiple Extended column test were done. All with similar results ECTN9 on this layer. Seems like there just wasn’t enough load on this yet to be a problem in this very specific area. Areas that are more loaded with this layer present are probably a different story. Going forward with caution based on these obs. 

Activity
Skiing
Date
Email
portercrockrd@gmail.com
Image Upload
Latitude
45.44
Location (from list)
Title of your observation
Blackmore snow obs
Longitude
-111.00
Observer Name
Porter Crockard
Phone
2054827002
Similar Regions

Poor Test Results on Mt Blackmore

Went for a ski in the Mt Blackmore area this am. Temps were cold in drainages, but surprisingly warm in the sun. The objective for the day was to ski the mellow ramp spilling East off of the North ridge of Mt Blackmore. The East face of Blackmore had clearly seen significant wind. We stopped to dig a pit in the shelter of a terrain feature before ascending further. Our result of ECTP 3 at 135cm (total snow depth of 160cm) was a red flag, and turned us around quickly. The ECT failed underneath a 5cm thick knife hard Wind Slab on a fist hard layer of mixed grains containing 0.1mm FC and 1.0-2.0mm GP.

Activity
Skiing
Date
Email
temccutcheon97@gmail.com
Latitude
45.45
Location (from list)
Title of your observation
Poor Test Results on Mt Blackmore
Longitude
-111.00
Observer Name
Tristan McCutcheon // Michael Murray
Phone
4356408802
Similar Regions

This morning while ascending a line on Sawtooth Mountain (Lower Novocain) we triggered an avalanche (ASu-SS-R2-D2-O)  that caught and carried my partner an estimated 180M and partially buried him. His leg and hand were unburied and excavation of the head was done in less than 2 minutes of the incident. The avalanche only involved new snow from the last 48hrs and was triggered on a MF crust/facet combo 30cm down(formed 1/30/22). The avalanche was 30cm at its deepest and 20-30M wide and ran 250M. We were lucky to find both skis and poles a little ways downslope.

Cooke City, 2022-02-02