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Eastern Sierra Avalanche Center

Professional Observation

       

Basic Information

Observation Details

Observation Date:
January 20, 2022 - January 21, 2022
Submitted:
January 21, 2022
Observer:
Brooke Maushund | Pro Observer
Zone or Region:
Bridgeport
Location:
Horse Creek Drainage, near Matterhorn Peak

Signs of Unstable Snow

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

Snow Stability

Stability Rating: 
Good
Confidence in Rating: 
High
Stability Trend: 
Steady

Key Points

  • Generally stable conditions exist in the Bridgeport region, in the Horse Creek Drainage
  • Surfaces varied from rotten faceted snow at lower elevations to absolute hard packed & icy conditions in the proper alpine. Everything from sastrugi, windboard, trap door breakable crust, brief sections of wind buff, and everything in the middle existed as well
  • The only thing more challenging than ski conditions were skinning / ascent conditions: ski and boot crampons, along with an ice axe, were not just warranted but needed to push into higher elevations
  • Surfaces observed in the true alpine were textured in ways that made for challenging skiing, and lines we had previously skied in different conditions/ seasons appeared much steeper due to wind effect
  • Winds were severely affected by the orographics of the area and were crossing slopes from multiple directions. However, not much snow was available for transport

Media

Clear skies at first light skinning up Horse Creek
Sugary rotten snow down lower in Horse Creek that was less than supportive over obstacles below
Skis left little marks on the snow past 8300', except in small pockets of wind drifted snow. Marks here are assumed to be from past mountaineering courses
Sam grateful he brought ski crampons.
Forrest very much still enjoying a type 2 day out
Firm surfaces near Matterhorn
A mix of wind buff, windboard, and hard & fast skiing

Advanced Information

Weather Summary

Cloud Cover:
Clear
Temperature:
4.2°
Wind:
Light , SE

Toured out of Twin Lakes at dawn for an investigatory adventure into the alpine in Horse Creek drainage. Skies were clear at at first light near 0640 as we skinned up Horse Creek from the campground (see photo), with temperatures below 0°C, and winds picking up to light from the NE from calm as we skinned up to 8000′ on a NNE facing slope. Snow surfaces varied from rotten faceting snow to hard packed icy surfaces that had us using ski crampons (see photo). As we made our way up past 8300′ heading S in the drainage, we observed no more soft surfaces aside from the occasional pocket of windbuff. Our skis barely left marks in the now as we picked our way up the benches to the tree island below the approach bench to Matterhorn Peak (see photo).

Once reaching the tree island at 9441′ and setting up camp / eating / discussing plans given the conditions, we observed HS 269cm with a supportive firm, unimpressionable crust. The skies were CLR with a light wind out of the SE. Tair 4.2°C, Tsurface -6.4°C, T10 -13.4°C at 1132 before rolling out of camp. From here we poked up towards Matterhorn Peak, curious of the conditions in the couloirs the mountain holds, fully knowing from visible coverage conditions looks poor.

Conditions skinning up to the bowl below Ski Dreams were “slide for life”, with ski crampons coming into play. Pockets of breakable crust on top of soft snow made the skinning more character building, & not inspiring confidence. Once reaching the bowl in the afternoon shade, similar conditions persisted (see photo), having us transition to boot crampons and ice axes at the last bench before rounding the corner to the exit of Ski Dreams. Once poking around to the bottom of the couloir, conditions were considerably steeper than the previous times we had been on the mountain, with ski conditions looking bumpy and hard packed, and possibly pushing the bounds of our late afternoon type 2 fun mission to be a type 3 fun type of ski. Given the time of day, little margin for error given our timing & lack of daylight, along with the conditions, we opted to head to the saddle between this chute and the other two prominent lines, and ski back to camp (see photo).

Wx @1703 back at camp had skies back to FEW, light wind out of the SE steady, and below freezing temps overnight. This morning we woke up to SCT cloud covered around 0700, calm winds in the basin but winds observed blowing from multiple directions at higher elevations in the true alpine assumed due to orographics (NW, SE). Winds picked up throughout the day today to moderate in the basin of the drainage, coming from the SE. While there was not plentiful snow for transport, we did see light snow transport along ridgelines today.

Avalanche Observations

While no currently unstable snow was observed during our tour, we did see old crowns (>1 week old) on Horse Creek Peak. These crowns appeared to be from old loading, and roughly (estimated from ridge between Horse Creek & Matterhorn Peaks):

NE-Facing/~40° start zone / 10900′ / R2 / D2.5 / HS / U – most likely N / ≥4′ crown

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