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Eastern Sierra Avalanche Center

Professional Observation

       

Basic Information

Observation Details

Observation Date:
December 28, 2022 - December 28, 2022
Submitted:
December 28, 2022
Observer:
Clancy Nelson | ESAC Forecaster
Zone or Region:
Bishop Creek
Location:
Bishop Bowl - Wind And Wain Cwust

Signs of Unstable Snow

Recent Avalanches? 
Yes
Cracking? 
Isolated
Collapsing? 
Isolated

Key Points

I took a quick after-work tour up Bishop Bowl.

  • I stomped on a northeast-facing test slope at 9,000 feet and triggered a small wind slab avalanche.
  • I counted at least 7 natural avalanche debris piles in the west-facing chutes off of Table Mountain. These were the result of natural wet loose avalanches that occurred during the early, wet part of the storm. They were mostly small in size (D1-1.5).
  • I got isolated cracking and collapsing around 9,500 feet, likely as a result of the new rain crust breaking under the storm snow.
  • It rained at least to my high point of 10,400 feet at the start of the storm. There’s a crust that thins from several inches thick below 9,000 feet to just a centimeter thick at 10,400. There’s between 8 inches and over a foot of new snow on top of the crust – deeper with elevation. The top of the new snow was wind-blown almost everywhere I traveled. It seemed as though it rained enough around Bishop that the whole snowpack under the crust got wet, including the basal facets – which I found still moist in a few quick hand pits.
  • There was a lot of blowing snow from the peaks. I could always find some east-facing slopes getting intense wind loading.

I stayed below treeline to reduce my chances of triggering a large avalanche. I stayed on low-angled terrain with no overhead hazards and kept to wind-sheltered slopes as best I could. In that kind of terrain the skiing was so good I wished I’d had more time. With the wind-affect, I’d bet the skiing was not only dangerous on steep leeward terrain but pretty crumby by comparison. The descent down the moraine was pretty sketchy and I’m not sure I’d recommend it.

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Advanced Information

Weather Summary

Cloud Cover:
Mostly Sunny
Temperature:
Below Freezing
Wind:
Moderate , W

Avalanche Observations

 #  Date Location Size Type Bed Sfc Depth Trigger Comments Photo
7 Past 24 hours Table Mountain
NW 9500 feet
D1.5 WL G-Ground N-Natural None
1 Today Moraine below Bishop Bowl
NE 9000 feet
D1 SS S-New Snow 1 foot AS-Skier
c-Intentional
15 feet wide. 50 feet vertical fall. Bed surface was the rain crust. Slab 4F. Slope angled ~35 degrees. None
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