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Eastern Sierra Avalanche Center

Professional Observation

       

Basic Information

Observation Details

Observation Date:
February 26, 2023 - February 26, 2023
Submitted:
February 26, 2023
Observer:
Clancy Nelson | ESAC Forecaster
Zone or Region:
Bishop Creek
Location:
Bishop Creek - Avalanche and Snowpack

Signs of Unstable Snow

Recent Avalanches? 
Yes
Cracking? 
Isolated
Collapsing? 
None Experienced

Key Points

Short drive and tour in Bishop Creek to look for recent avalanches and look at the snowpack and snow available for transport as an NWS Blizzard warning takes effect with heavy snow and strong winds at all elevations tomorrow.

  • Several recent natural avalanches on northwest aspects near and below treeline. A few of these were harmless sluffs. 3 were large wind slab avalanches. See photos and avalanche observations for more info.
  • We found wind-stiffened snow on west, north, and east aspects below treeline. We got some cracking on wind-loaded test slopes but triggered no avalanches. Slabs were 4 finger to 1 finger hard and sat atop fist-hard storm snow. Southwest wind was cranking above treeline and we saw intense blowing snow all day. Winds increased to light below treeline in the afternoon.
  • We dug a snow pit on a northwest aspect below treeline to see how much snow would be available for strong winds and whether persistent weak layers are reactive at lower elevations. We found plenty of soft snow ready to drift if southwest or west winds pick up below treeline. We found big facets under a knife-hard crust under the 2+ feet of recent storm snow, through these did not give us results in several snowpack tests. The recent storm snow was upside-down and breaking trail out of the popular skin track was difficult.

Strong wind loading, cracking in wind slabs, and recent avalanches clued us into the possibility that we could find some sensitive wind slabs if we weren’t paying close attention. We turned around because of a lack of time, but we agreed before leaving some of our first test slopes that we would stick to low-angled terrain.

 

Media

Large wind slab avalanches that likely ran 2/25 near and below treeline in Bishop Creek
Large natural wind slab avalanche above Aspendell that likely ran 2/24 or 2/25
Cracking on wind-loaded test slopes below treeline
Cracking in an undercut wind slabs below treeline
Blowing snow Mt. Tom
Blowing snow Pine Creek
Blowing snow Lamarck

Advanced Information

Weather Summary

Cloud Cover:
Mostly Cloudy
Temperature:
26.5 F
Wind:
Light , SW

Increasing clouds and wind. The next storm appeared to move over the Sierra Crest by early afternoon. It was very warm in the sun but it seemed to have no affect of the surface snow which stayed cold and dry.

Avalanche Observations

 #  Date Location Size Type Bed Sfc Depth Trigger Comments Photo
3 Past 48 hours Just down canyon from Aspendell. NW aspect of Table Mtn.
NW 9200 ft
D2 WS I-New/Old Interface N-Natural None
3 Past 24 hours NW slopes above Big Trees CG
NW 7600 ft
D1 L S-New Snow N-Natural None
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