Thin natural wind slabs in Cooke City
From email (1/30/2020): "2 natural avalanches that ran last night, just west of Cooke City. Both slides were on easterly aspects around 9500'."
From email (1/30/2020): "2 natural avalanches that ran last night, just west of Cooke City. Both slides were on easterly aspects around 9500'."
From email (1/30/2020): "2 natural avalanches that ran last night, just west of Cooke City. Both slides were on easterly aspects around 9500'."
From email (1/30/2020): "2 natural avalanches that ran last night, just west of Cooke City. Both slides were on easterly aspects around 9500'."
From email: "There was a large avalanche on the north face of Fan. It is not on the NE Face that everyone skis, but out to the west of the north couloir where there is a major ridge off the summit. North aspect, estimated at over 1K ft. wide, to the ground with a deep crown. Likely triggered by cornice fall."
We triggered this avalanche of wind-drifted snow as we approached very carefully from a low angle slope above, on 1/30/2020. This is near Lulu Pass outside Cooke City on a south facing slope at 10,000'. It broke within recently drifted snow, but these slabs could be enough weight to break deeper and wider on sugary layers deep in the snowpack. Photo: GNFAC
We triggered this avalanche of wind-drifted snow as we approached very carefully from a low angle slope above, on 1/30/2020. This is near Lulu Pass outside Cooke City on a south facing slope at 10,000'. It broke within recently drifted snow, but these slabs could be enough weight to break deeper and wider on sugary layers deep in the snowpack. Photo: GNFAC
We triggered this avalanche of wind-drifted snow as we approached very carefully from a low angle slope above, on 1/30/2020. This was near Lulu Pass outside Cooke City on a south facing slope at 10,000'. It broke within recently drifted snow, but these slabs could be enough weight to break deeper and wider on sugary layers deep in the snowpack. I initially approached where the cornice was a little steeper (no overhang though), and then I got that funny feeling and backed off and went to safer feeling spot with the intention to dig at the top of the slope. It broke within the recent snow/wind load, and did not step down. It was about 100’ wide x 70’ long x 2-3’ deep.
We triggered this avalanche of wind-drifted snow as we approached very carefully from a low angle slope above, on 1/30/2020. This is near Lulu Pass outside Cooke City on a south facing slope at 10,000'. It broke within recently drifted snow, but these slabs could be enough weight to break deeper and wider on sugary layers deep in the snowpack. Photo: GNFAC