A snowmobiler triggered this slide on the afternoon of 3/2/19 behind Sage Peak in the southern Madison Range. Photo: J. Hillier
Forecast link: GNFAC Avalanche Forecast for Sun Mar 3, 2019GNFAC Avalanche Forecast for Mon Mar 4, 2019
A snowmobiler triggered this slide on the afternoon of 3/2/19 behind Sage Peak in the southern Madison Range. Photo: J. Hillier
A snowmobiler triggered this slide on the afternoon of 3/2/19 behind Sage Peak in the southern Madison Range. Photo: J. Hillier
A skier reported recent natural slab avalanches on Miller Mtn. near Cooke City. They failed on E-NE aspects just below 10,000'. Another group saw a recent wind slab avalanche on the east face of Mineral Mtn (R1D1.5). A third group sent in a video of a powder cloud from a natural avalanche on Barronette Peak. Photo: B. Fredlund, Video: J. Hodges
From BBSP on 3/2/19: "Large natural avalanche pulled out last night/early morning on the backside of north peak of saddle peak in Bostwick canyon, the slide path is known as the 'Y' to local skiers and hasn't run this year, or been skied. Crowns looked to be 3-6ft, it ran further than anything i've seen there in the past decade, knocking over small trees and some old standing dead in the run out. R3 D3.5."
From BBSP on 3/2/19: "Large natural avalanche pulled out last night/early morning on the backside of north peak of saddle peak in Bostwick canyon, the slide path is known as the 'Y' to local skiers and hasn't run this year, or been skied. Crowns looked to be 3-6ft, it ran further than anything i've seen there in the past decade, knocking over small trees and some old standing dead in the run out. R3 D3.5." Photo: BBSP
From BBSP on 3/2/19: "Large natural avalanche pulled out last night/early morning on the backside of north peak of saddle peak in Bostwick canyon, the slide path is known as the 'Y' to local skiers and hasn't run this year, or been skied. Crowns looked to be 3-6ft, it ran further than anything i've seen there in the past decade, knocking over small trees and some old standing dead in the run out. R3 D3.5." Photo: BBSP
A skier saw this recent natural slab avalanche on a east aspect around 9,700' near Cooke City. He also saw another large slab avalanche on the ENE side of Miller ridge just below 10,000'. Photo: B. Fredlund
Deepest part of crown from slide triggered 3/2 by the YC Ski Patrol conducted avalanche mitigation work above one of their roads. A 2lb explosives charge was detonated from an aerial tram and triggered a R4/D3 avalanche that ran to the ground on depth hoar. The crown was 4', The max path width was around 250', and it ran 350 vertical feet to the bottom of the runout zone. The elevation was 8400' on a ENE aspect and max slope angle of 36 degrees. Photos courtesy YC Ski Patrol.
From YCSP: "Today the YC Ski Patrol conducted avalanche mitigation work above one of our roads. The area is outside of our ski area boundary and receives no skier traffic. A 2lb explosives charge was detonated from an aerial tram and triggered a R4/D3 avalanche that ran to the ground on depth hoar. The crown was 4', The max path width was around 250', and it ran 350 vertical feet to the bottom of the runout zone. The elevation was 8400' on a ENE aspect and max slope angle of 36 degrees. Two sections of road, which were controlled for traffic, were buried with an estimated 15-20 feet deep deposition pile. We’ve seen this path go big in the Spring, but we can’t recall it ever going quite this big."
Today the YC Ski Patrol conducted avalanche mitigation work above one of our roads. The area is outside of our ski area boundary and receives no skier traffic. A 2lb explosives charge was detonated from an aerial tram and triggered a R4/D3 avalanche that ran to the ground on depth hoar. The crown was 4', The max path width was around 250', and it ran 350 vertical feet to the bottom of the runout zone. The elevation was 8400' on a ENE aspect and max slope angle of 36 degrees.