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Eastern Sierra Avalanche Center

Professional Observation

       

Basic Information

Observation Details

Observation Date:
April 2, 2023
Submitted:
April 2, 2023
Observer:
Barbara R Wanner | Key Observer
Zone or Region:
Lee Vining
Location:
San Joaquin Ridge: Extreme Winds

Signs of Unstable Snow

Recent Avalanches? 
None Observed
Cracking? 
None Experienced
Collapsing? 
None Experienced

Snow Stability

Stability Rating: 
Fair
Confidence in Rating: 
Moderate
Stability Trend: 
Steady

Key Points

Traversed from Mammoth to June Mountain via San Joaquin Ridge.

  • The main thing that stood out on Saturday were the winds. The wind speeds were consistently much higher than forecast with steady 60 mph winds gusting higher at times.
  • Widespread scouring of the ridge and big Sastrugi forming. Huge cornices at Deadman Pass were being scoured down and looked a bit smaller than last week.
  • Mostly turbulent suspension of the snow rather than down slope deposition.
  • I dug a pit in the NE aspect below the ridge at 10’000 ft to see if there were any crusts or crust- facet combos. Did not find any crusts or PWL in the upper 100 cm of the snowpack. 15 cm F PP, slightly rippled and soft, wind deposited snow  made for pretty good skiing. Underneath I found 30 cm 4F  DF over 50 cm 1F RGwp and  1F+ RGwp below that.
  • NE aspect skiing quality: Variable snow surfaces, all wind affected. Ranging from soft rippled snow to almost supportable wind crust, to smooth and supportable wind crust with some nice wind buff on it.
  • Solar aspects are covered with a mostly breakable MF crust, pretty textured, about 4 cm thick. With F soft faceting DF’s underneath. Some solar softening in places sheltered from the wind.
  • I noticed a network of cracks that ran across the crust on the W and SW aspects. Nothing indicating instability. Just interesting.

Advanced Information

Weather Summary

Cloud Cover:
Mostly Sunny
Temperature:
Above freezing
Wind:
Extreme , SW

Snowpack Observations

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