24-25

Shooting Cracks up Dudley Creek

Date

Shooting cracks on Tick ridge in the Dudley drainage. This slab from my ski cut was about 20” deep and 60’ wide. It’s NE facing so pretty wind blown. I took a gladed path but in more open sections I imagine this would have propagated much wider and further downslope. Probably 35 degrees here.

Region
Northern Madison
Location (from list)
Dudley Creek
Observer Name
Stefan Budac

New Snow, Wind, and ... Dust? at Buck Ridge

Date
Activity
Snowmobiling

Today, we had the pleasure of riding with USFS Snow Rangers from Bozeman, Livingston, Gardiner and Cooke City. We rode into First and Second Yellow Mule and Buck Creek drainages. 

Temperatures were warm, topping nearly 40 degrees at the parking lot around 4pm. Strong winds blew all day from the SW, sustaining 30mph at ridgelines. Snow was actively transported all day by winds, and plumes were visible on far away ridgelines and summits. There was around 1.5-2' of new snow from the weekend. Widespread dirt and/or dust was also noted on snow surfaces.

Our primary concern today was slopes where strong winds had formed thicker slabs from recent snowfall. On the headwall of the Second Yellow Mule, we saw two recent wind slab avalanches. These were small (R1 D1), immediately below the ridge, and likely broke late last night or this morning. 

Our snowpits today were relatively anticlimactic. We were curious as to how recently buried weak layers were reacting to the new snow. In three separate locations, we performed multiple tests and saw high scoring propagation in only 2 of 9 total tests. This propagation was difficult to replicate. We had ECTN's within the new snow and on the new/old interface. We found broken surface hoar feathers and facets under the new snow, but even those weak grains were not visible in every pit. That being said, we did not travel into Bear Basin, where, prior to the recent snow, Alex found large, buried surface hoar  (https://www.mtavalanche.com/node/33832). We did not observe any cracking or collapsing. 

Region
Northern Madison
Location (from list)
Buck Ridge
Observer Name
H. Darby

Wind slabs at Lionhead

Date
Activity
Snowmobiling

Plenty of wind slabs ranging in size on Lionhead ridge and on surrounding slopes. Noticed a few natural slides on the way in, a few more on the way out that were rider triggered. Snow was quite wet by this afternoon @8500’. 

Region
Lionhead Range
Location (from list)
Lionhead Ridge
Observer Name
Riley

recent avalanches near Cooke City

Date
Activity
Skiing

Afternoon ski/ snowmobile tour north of Cooke City today.  Some recent avalanche activity noted on east Mt. Henderson, and NE Miller Ridge.  Photos attached.

Very warm temps today (33F for a high at Fisher Creek, but 47F at 2pm the NE Entrance!)

There is now a widespread dust/ pollen layer on the snow surface from recent strong SWerly winds also.

The new snow was a bit upside-down and sticky today with the warm temps, but still skied well on the right aspects and timing.

I measured the new snow depth up near the base of Lulu Pass and was finding 65cms settled new.  Much less in the lower elevations around Cooke City though.

 

Also, yesterday we were ski touring up Republic Creek on westerly aspects of Woody Ridge.  I was able to ski cut a small test slope and get a wind slab to crack and move a short distance (6" deep), but aside from that, no other natural avalanche activity noted on west Woody (good visibility in afternoon on exit).  

Also, on our exit yesterday we observed 3 D1 storm slab/ wind slab natural avalanches on east Mt. Republic.  All mid slope, where it is common for cross-loading.  These appeared to be failing at the new/ old interface.

No collapsing noted the last 3 days of ski touring.  

Region
Cooke City
Location (from list)
Henderson Mountain
Observer Name
B. Fredlund

New snow avalanches

Date
Activity
Skiing

Toured up around fairy lake today, winds were ripping all day. Saw several d1 soft slabs in upper elevation terrain, many of them running quite far. We opted ski a lower elevation zone and were surprised to find a soft slab (d1/r1) that ran on an east facing slope at about 7500’ and about 500-600 ft below the ridge line on a slope just over 30 degrees. 

Region
Bridger Range
Observer Name
Jay Alford

Excellent riding 1-3 feet new good base

Date
Activity
Snowmobiling

Sunday, 2/2, excellent trail condition to Independence thanks to SGCRA volunteers. On top around Monument Pk, still have rocks just under the surface.  Excellent riding in the trees approaching Blue Lk and Baboon. This new storm is all we need for prime riding conditions.  

Region
Out of Advisory Area
Location (from list)
Independence Mine
Observer Name
Monument Peak Main Boulder Independence

GNFAC Avalanche Forecast for Tue Feb 4, 2025

Snowpack and Avalanche Discussion

<p>Since Friday, the mountains near Cooke City, West Yellowstone, and Island Park have received 16-30” of snow, equivalent to 2-3” of snow water equivalent, with Cooke City coming out on top. Snow fell on weak surfaces and strong winds are drifting new snow into cohesive slabs, making human-triggered avalanches likely on many slopes.</p>

<p><strong>Persistent slab avalanches</strong> breaking 1-3 feet deep on buried weak layers of facets and surface hoar formed during last week’s high pressure are likely. These will break widely and may be triggered remotely from terrain near steep slopes. Avalanches failing on older weak layers buried near the base of the snowpack are possible. The likelihood of avalanches is amplified on wind-loaded slopes where the weight of drifted snow adds stress to weak layers.</p>

<p>Take the relatively short list on the <a href="https://www.mtavalanche.com/avalanche-activity"><span>Avalanche Activity Log</span></a> with a grain of salt, given limited visibility:</p>

<ul>
<li>On Monday, Mark triggered a wind-loaded slope in the Centennial Mountains from a flat ridge top that broke 200 feet wide (<a href="https://youtube.com/shorts/26MdlE8SkEc"><strong><span>video</span></str…;)</li>
<li>A rider in the Lionhead area performed a re-entry, triggering a very small avalanche (<a href="https://youtube.com/shorts/I1BdaDmw-ko"><strong><span>video</span></str…;)</li>
<li>We received reports of a few small wind slab avalanches over the weekend near Cooke City (<a href="https://www.mtavalanche.com/avalanche-activity"><strong><span>avalanche log</span></strong></a>).</li>
</ul>

<p><span>Avoid wind-loaded slopes and limit travel on any slope steeper than 30 degrees. This requires cautious route-finding and conservative decision-making. The avalanche danger is CONSIDERABLE. <span>&nbsp;</span></span></p>

<p>The Madison and Gallatin Ranges received 12-20” of snow equal to 1.2-1.6” of SWE since Friday. The Big Sky area received the top end of this range.</p>

<p>Twenty to 40 mph winds are transporting recent snow into cohesive slabs and making human-triggered avalanches likely. Yesterday, <span>wind-loaded slopes cracked under our skis on switchbacks and in stability assessments in Beehive Basin (</span><a href="https://youtube.com/shorts/PBsMPg_BBQw"><strong><span>video</span></str…;), and </span>on Sunday, Mark and Alex observed cracks shooting 10-50 feet from their sleds in the Taylor Fork. Weak layers formed at the surface during last week’s high pressure are the primary culprit (<a href="https://www.mtavalanche.com/node/33944"><strong><span>observation</span…;, <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y7Nm5dbbBqQ"><strong><span>video</span>…;

<p>Avoid wind-loaded slopes where human-triggered <strong>persistent slab </strong><span>and </span><strong>wind slab avalanches </strong>are likely. Dig down a few feet to look for weak layers and test for instability before considering travel on non-wind-loaded terrain steeper than 30 degrees. Shooting cracks, collapsing and recent avalanche activity supersede any indicator of <em>stability. </em></p>

<p>The avalanche danger level is CONSIDERABLE on wind-loaded slopes and MODERATE on other slopes in the Madison and Gallatin Ranges.</p>

<p>The Bridger Range has received less snow than the rest of the forecast area, with 11” equal to 1.0” of SWE since Friday and less wind. Avalanches are possible within recently drifted snow. With light winds, areas of concern for <strong>wind slab avalanches </strong>are upper-elevation terrain near ridgelines, on more prominent alpine faces and below cornices.</p>

<p>While weak layers formed under last week’s clear skies exist on some slopes, windy and warmer conditions interrupted widespread weak layer formation in the Bridger Range. Evaluate slopes for shooting cracks, a stiffening of the snow surface, and potential wind-loading before considering steep terrain. Dig below the recent snow to evaluate for instability at the interface of the older snow and snow that fell since Friday.</p>

<p><span>Human-triggered avalanches are possible, and the avalanche danger is MODERATE. </span></p>

KING AND QUEEN OF THE RIDGE RESULTS

On Saturday We closed out King and Queen of the Ridge with nearly $30,000 raised! We will post final numbers here after we confirm totals. Thank you to all who participated and raised funds for The Friends of the GNFAC.