Winter Again

Location Name: 
Forecaster Observation: Swan Range
Observation date: 
Thursday, April 22, 2021 - 15:15

Is this an Avalanche Observation: 
Yes
Observation made by: Forecaster

Tabs

Quick Observation

Went to Noisy Basin to watch the cold front come in.

  • Before the storm:
    • Despite temperatures not dipping below freezing last night, and the surface being wet at mid elevations this morning, the most recent melt-freeze crust was stout and supportable. Boot penetration was only 3 cm. The crust covered all aspects and elevations.
    • Snow line was between 4,500 and 5,400 feet, depending on aspect.
    • Sheltered, shady slopes at mid elevations had about 2 inches of dry snow from the last Canadian cold front on the 18th-19th atop the crust.
    • The snowpack under the crust consisted of moist to wet melt forms on south aspects and settled dry snow with a few graupel and facet layers on north aspects. See photo and snowpack tab.
    • I found a few rocky areas in alpine terrain where the snowpack is thin, around a meter deep, and consists entirely of weak facets below the recent crust.
  • The front crossed the Swan Divide around 9:30 am when winds and snowfall started.
    • Temperatures quickly dropped below freezing. Snowfall increased quickly with periods of about an inch per hour.
    • Winds became moderate to strong from the northeast and moderate to intense blowing snow was a constant on ridgelines above 6,000 feet.
    • New wind slabs developed quickly on south-facing slopes. These were thin, but regularly cracked around me on test slopes.
    • On sheltered windward slopes I easily triggered loose dry sluffs. These were small, running about 100 feet, because there wasn't much snow to entrain.
    • It snowed 2 inches by the time I left in the early afternoon.
Snowpack, Avalanche, Weather Images: 
Snowpack, Avalanche, Weather Videos: 

Blowing Snow From NE Wind, Noisy Basin

Travel Details
Region: 
Swan Range - West Side (Flathead Valley access)
Route Description: 

To 7100 ft.

Activity: 
Skiing
Snowpack Details
Snowpack and Weather Details: 
Hide Terrain
Elevation of observation: 
3500-5000 ft
5000-6500 ft
Above 6500 ft
Aspect(s) of observation: 
N
NE
E
SE
S
SW
W
NW
Red Flags: 
Blowing snow
Persistent Weak Layers: 
Facets or Faceted Crust
Buried
New Snow in the past 24 hours: 
2.00in.
Total Snow Depth: 
300 cm
More comments about the snowpack and weather: 
@ 6000 ft, NE aspect, HS = 300cm: ECTN 24, PST 77/100 (ARR), and CTM SP down 27 cm in the PPgp from 4/10 under the recent K hard MFcr. CTH SP and PST 53/100 (END) down 57 cm in a layer of F+ hard, 1mm FCxr and decomposing PPgp under a 1F slab. Despite precip falling as snow down to about 3,500 ft, it was not sticking to the warm ground where there was not existing snow cover.
Blowing Snow: 
Intense
Wind Speed: 
Moderate (Small trees sway)
Wind Direction: 
Northeast
Air temperature: 
Below Freezing
Snow line: 
3500 feet
Highest Precipitation Rate: 
Moderate Snowfall (S2)
Avalanche Details
Avalanche Details: 
Date and Time of Avalanche: 
Thursday, April 22, 2021 - 13:00
Number of avalanches: 
2
Avalanche Type: 
Loose Dry/ Sluff
Failure Plane/Weak Layer: 
New/old snow interface
More information or comments about the avalanche: 
Hide Trigger
Trigger: 
skier
Trigger Modifier: 
Intentionally Triggered
Hide Terrain
Start Zone Slope Angle: 
45
Aspect: 
Northwest
Starting Elevation: 
above-treeline
Hide Size
Destructive Size: 
D1 Relatively harmless to people.
Relative Size: 
R1 Very Small
Crown Height: 
Less than 1 ft
Avalanche Length (Vertical Run): 
100ft.
Avalanche Width (Average width): 
30ft.
Avalanche Location: