Valdez

Forecast Expired - 02/05/2021

Above 4,000ftModerate

2,000 to 4,000ftModerate

Below 2,000ftModerate

Degrees of Avalanche Danger

Avalanche Problems

Problem 1

Wind Slab:

The 12 inches of very dry snow that exists on Thompson Pass will be very susceptible to being redistributed into wind slabs on lee aspects were wind is present.  Wind slabs were not noted up to 3600′ on 2/3.  

 

Wind slab formation may be possible on multiple aspects as the wind was blowing from multiple directions 2/3.  Were present, expect these slabs to be more reactive than you may anticipate due to poor bonding of the new snow along with a hard bed surface.  Avoid freshly wind loaded slopes.

 

Very hard wind slabs created 2/1 have been found to be unreactive and showed no signs of instability 2/3.  Although unlikely, triggering an old wind slab would be consequential as it would be a hard slab and likely propagate a long distance once initiated.

 

 

 

Likelihood:

  • Almost Certain
  • Very Likely
  • Likely
  • Possible
  • Unlikely

Size:

  • Historic
  • Very Large
  • Large
  • Small

Trend

  • Increasing
  • Steady
  • Decreasing

Problem 2

Deep Slab:

 

 

 

 

Instabilities in the mid and lower snowpack exist in some locations.  These include buried surface hoar from 1/3 and basal facets at the ground.  There have not been any reports of these layers being reactive in the last 2 weeks except when very large loads are applied.  These large loads include significant precipitation with rising temperatures, artillery, rapid wind loading and cornice or serac fall.  A natural full depth avalanche at 40.5 Mile Peak, ~6000′ NW aspect is a clear indicator that basal facets are still a concern in our continental zone.  This avalanche likely failed during the 1/26 wind event, cornice fall may have been the straw that broke the camels back. See avalanche activity section for photo

 

Although it is unlikely to make an avalanche on these layers they would probably be unsurvivable. Avoid traveling under cornices and avoid avalanche terrain during rapidly changing weather.

 

 

Likelihood:

  • Almost Certain
  • Very Likely
  • Likely
  • Possible
  • Unlikely

Size:

  • Historic
  • Very Large
  • Large
  • Small

Trend

  • Increasing
  • Steady
  • Decreasing

Problem 3

Loose Snow:

New snow that has fallen 2/2 has not bonded well with the very hard wind slabs that exist underneath.  Sluffs are running on lower slope angles than typical.  Expect sluffs that entrain all the new snow on slopes steeper than 35 °.  Good sluff management skills will be necessary in steep terrain today.  Avoid traveling on big, steep slopes above terrain traps.

Likelihood:

  • Almost Certain
  • Very Likely
  • Likely
  • Possible
  • Unlikely

Size:

  • Historic
  • Very Large
  • Large
  • Small

Trend

  • Increasing
  • Steady
  • Decreasing

Avalanche Activity

2/1- Natural avalanches from the 2/1 outflow event were noted on Hippie Ridge in cross loaded gullies SW aspect/ D2’s ~4000’/ depths were difficult to gauge because crown were rapidly being filled in by wind deposit.

-Slides were also noted on Averys: SW/~3500’/ ~300′ wide/ D2

40.5 Mile Peak:W-N/~3500’/ 3 separate D2’s/ ~200-300′ wide

As stated above depths were difficult to gauge due to wind refill.  A report did come in of  3′ crowns on the west aspects of the Mt. Dimond moraines/ ~4000’/ ~300′ wide

Many other avalanches likely occurred but observation was limited due to wind refilling crowns.

1/27- The photo below shows a natural  D3 avalanche that was reported on 1/30. It is uncertain when this avalanche occurred. It most likely happened during the 1/26 wind event.  40.5 Mile Peak/ NW aspect/ full depth, 3+ meters / ~800′ wide/6000′.  Demonstrates that basal facets are still a player in our continental zone.

-Natural D2 avalanche observed at 42 mile in a cross loaded south facing gully.

1/18-19- Numerous wet loose slides occurred region-wide below 2000′.

Schoolbus had a natural avalanche affect the highway early 1/19 that covered the road with 2′ of debris for ~100′.

DOT mitigation efforts produced avalanches at Snow Slide Gulch, Ptarmigan Drop (Nick’s Buttress), Python Buttress, Three Pigs and 40.5 Mile peak.  

The most notable slide occurred at Ptarmigan Drop and Python and deposited 6′ of snow on the highway for 150′ of road length.  Crowns failed at ~3500′ and were extensive, connecting almost the entirety of the Nicks’ through Python Buttresses.  The western extent of Nicks stepped down to the ground in an area that failed full depth 12/1. Nearly a mile of terrain was effected with some crowns approaching a quarter mile in length.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

It is unclear how much of the activity at Three Pigs and 40.5 Mile was natural versus artillery triggered, but there were multiple paths leaving debris at the bottom of run outs.

1/15- Two natural D2 avalanches observed on a NW aspect of RFS, crown~ 3′ deep.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

1/9-  Natural avalanche observed on an east aspect of North Tiekel.  Likely failed during warmup the night of 1/8.  Avalanches failed at terrain convexities around 3500′.  This area is 4 miles north (beyond) our Continental forecast zone, but is still indicative of that zone.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

1/8- 3 separate skier triggered avalanches on Cracked Ice at 2800’/ 40 cms deep (16 inches)/ 100-300′ wide/ ran 600-700 feet and failed on the 1/3 buried surface hoar layer. SS-AR-U-D1.5-2-O

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Lower section of far lookers left crown.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

12/24- Observers reported remote triggered avalanches up to 100 meters away that were a meter deep.  Tsaina trees below 3000′.

12/23- DOT mitigation work on snow slide gulch produced 3 D2.5’s that ran half of their path.

– HS-N-R3-D3-G, NW Crudbusters/ ~5000′

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

-Multiple D2-D2.5 slides on Oddessey and Little Oddessey.  NW-N aspects.  Only Little Oddessey crown was clear.  ~100 yards wide, ~4′ deep.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

-Natural D3 avalanche on Billy Mitchell NW-N aspects, originated ~5000′ stepped down to the ground around 4200′ in rocky terrain. Approximately 200 yards wide.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

-Natural D2 avalanche activity was also noted on west aspects of 40.5 mile and Iguana Backs ~3500′.  Further observations were prevented due to poor light.

12/20- A powder cloud reached the highway at the mp 42 slide path. “Three Pigs”.  No other details available

 

-Numerous small (3-4″ deep) natural avalanches were observed in the Python and Cracked Ice Buttress area.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

12/20- Multiple D1 soft slabs off Mt Cheddar Cheese Wedge (Hippie Ridge) originating from ~6500′

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

12/3- Numerous natural avalanches were observed north of Thompson Pass with many avalanches failing at the ground.  Observations were not made south of Thompson Pass.

Avalanches observed from 46 mile towards Thompson Pass:

Three Pigs: Nearly every path on the SE face ran with debris deposits stopping  in the top 1/3 of aprons, thick alders prevented slides from running full path.  These were mostly D3 avalanches.

40.5 Mile Peak: Many paths running similar to Three Pigs, with one running full path to the Tsaina river.  Mainly W-NW aspects, D3’s

Max High (Peak on the southern extent of Hippie Ridge)  had a D3 avalanche with a crown near 5500′,SW aspect.

Upper Catchers Mitt bowl E aspect, slid R4-D3 ,triggering further avalanches lower down.

The main activity noted, was on the buttresses on the east side of the pass, from Cracked Ice through North Odessey Gully.  Every buttress had significant avalanche activity originating ~4000-5000′.  Many of these failed at the ground, north – northwest aspect.   Pictures below.

School Bus and North Odyssey Gully both ran with debris in the runouts.  

 

Many other large to very large natural avalanches occurred.

 

 

 

12/2- DOT reported a natural D2.5-3 avalanche that hit the Lowe river at Snowslide Gulch.

11/30- Natural avalanche observed on 40.5 mile peak just to the South of the Shovel.  West aspect, ~4500′, crown ~200′ wide, poor light prevented further observation.  SS-N-R1-D2-U.

11/29: Natural avalanche observed on Billy Mitchell Cry babys shoulder, similar elevation as 11/16 slide but originated a couple hundred meters further west.  Released from ~4000′ with a crown length of ~ 200 meters, North aspect, ~ 37°, failed at the ground.  HS-N-R2-D2.5-G 

11/16: Natural avalanche observed on Billy Mitchell “Cry babys shoulder”.  Released from~3500′ with a crown length of ~200 meters, North aspect. This slide was triggered by recent NE wind cross loading the slope.  SS-N-R2-D2-U

11/15: Natural avalanche observed in Loveland Basin on a South aspect, down the ridge from Tones Temple.  This slide was triggered by recent NE wind loading and failed at the ground. SS-N-R1-D2-G

 

 

 

 

Weather

2/4- Clearing skies with light to moderate northeast wind.

The Thompson Pass Mountain Forecast covers the mountains (above
1000 ft) surrounding Keystone Canyon through Thompson Pass to
Worthington Glacier.

This forecast is for use in snow safety activities and emergency
management.

                   Today        Tonight

Temp at 1000`      21 F         11 F

Temp at 3000`      20 F         10-20 F

Chance of precip   0%           0%

Precip amount
(above 1000 FT)    0.00 in      0.00 in

Snow amount
(above 1000 FT)    0 in         0 in

Snow level         sea level    sea level

Wind 3000` ridges  NE 8-18 mph  NE 10-20 mph

Remarks...None.
Date: 02/04 24 hr snow (inches) HN24W (snow water equivalent inches) High Temp (F) Low Temp (F) Weekly SWE Inches (Monday-Sunday) February snowfall Season snowfall HS (snowpack depth inches)
Valdez N/O N/O .3 4 145 47
Thompson Pass N/O N/O 18 -10 .5 10 376 84
46 Mile Trace 0 2 -12 .2 3 123 46

Thompson Pass weather history 20/21.  Click on links above the images to see full size view

 

November 2020

TP DEC 2020

TP as of 1/27

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Additional Information

Our season began with a cold, dry and windy November which promoted faceting in the thin snowpack that existed.  Only 28 inches of snow were recorded at Thompson Pass from 11/1 through 11/24.  

November 25 began a series of storms that deposited 90” of snow and 11.1” of SWE on Thompson Pass at road level in an 8 day period.  At the tail end of these storms the pass received 25” of snow and 3.7” of SWE in 48 hours, along with rising temps that pushed freezing line up to 3000’.  This sparked a widespread natural avalanche cycle that failed on faceted snow created in early November. Many of these slides failed at the ground.  See avalanche activity section for pictures of the cycle.

December continued with fairly regular snow fall and a couple periods of stable (dry) weather, with snowfall totaling 120 inches on Thompson Pass.    Another, smaller natural avalanche cycle occurred on the 12/22 after Thompson Pass received 44 inches of snow with 4” of SWE in a 4 day period.  Two full-depth naturals occurred in the Continental region on NW-N aspects between 4500-5000’ on NW Crudbusters and Billy Mitchell.  Various other soft slab D2’s occurred in other regions as well. This indicated that depth hoar is still a concern in the Continental region but is becoming less so in our Maritime and Intermountain regions.  Incremental snowfall during the second half of December has allowed the snowpack to slowly gain depth and strength.

Cold, stable weather at the end of December created widespread areas of surface hoar up to 1 cm in height, observed on all aspects between 2000-4000’ and up to ridge lines in isolated locations.  This layer was more concentrated on the north side of Thompson Pass, promoted by colder temperatures and an ice fog layer that was forming during this time frame.  However, this surface hoar has been reported in the Port of Valdez up to brush line.

1-3 feet of snow has since accumulated on top of this weak layer from 1/3-1/17.

A significant change in weather arrived on 1/18 delivering as much as 5″ of water to low lying areas with over 2 feet of snow accumulating above 2000′ accompanied by strong southeast winds.  This prompted a natural avalanche cycle with the mid elevation band seeing the most activity.

Outflow winds have begun to affect our area beginning 1/26.  building hard wind slabs on lee aspects and scouring windward slopes and ridges in wind channeled terrain.

Snowpack structure generally becomes thinner and weaker as you move North from Thompson Pass

 

Photos of Surface Hoar taken 1/1 on Crudbusters at 3500′ north aspect.

 

Announcements

The avalanche hazard is moderate at all elevations.  Human triggered avalanches are possible in specific locations.  Thompson Pass received a foot of very low density snow on 2/2-2/3.  This new snow has shown no cohesion (no slab) where it is unaffected by wind.  Snow of this nature will be easily pushed into fresh wind slabs onto lee aspects where affected by wind and will be reactive to human triggers 2-3 feet deep.  Avoid wind loaded terrain and watch for signs of wind redistributed snow.  

If skiing in steep terrain today be prepared for sluffs and have a plan, don’t ski yourself into your sluff train and avoid steep slopes that end in terrain traps.

For more information click the (+full forecast) button below.

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