"We went on a tour in the Bridgers today [Apr 5], we ascended the east ridge of Naya Nuki to the entrance of the Great One. Wind was blowing and we were being careful about potential wind slabs up high.
From BBSP: " At 2.45?pm a... solo skier triggered a wind loaded pocket on the main face of Saddle Peak that ran down over the cliff and produced an impressive powder cloud.... I met him... and confirm he was alone and no one was in front of him. The avalanche looked to be 2' deep on the southern flank and 5" deep on the northern flank... It entrained more snow on the way down, one 2' deep downhill wind loaded pocket and some loose wet snow. It ran into the bottom of the going home chute, gouging a large hole and then 100ft downhill left a 200ft by 30ft wide shallow debris pile."
From BBSP: " At 2.45?pm [Apr 5] a... solo skier triggered a wind loaded pocket on the main face of Saddle Peak that ran down over the cliff and produced an impressive powder cloud.... I met him... and confirm he was alone and no one was in front of him. The avalanche looked to be 2' deep on the southern flank and 5" deep on the northern flank... It entrained more snow on the way down, one 2' deep downhill wind loaded pocket and some loose wet snow. It ran into the bottom of the going home chute, gouging a large hole and then 100ft downhill left a 200ft by 30ft wide shallow debris pile."
(Apr 5 ) "Observed multiple D1-1.5 natural dry loose avalanches (and some tiny wind slab pockets under the ridge cornice) that likely occurred during peak warming around 2-3 PM. North/sheltered aspects from ~9- 8.5k held an average of 8+ inches of dry, drifted snow...." Photo: G. Antonioli
We skied near Henderson Mtn. and Lulu Pass. Skies were clear with a light breeze near the ridgelines. Temperatures stayed below or just barely above freezing.
We saw a couple 3-6" deep natural wind slab avalanches and a few dry loose slides that looked to have happened within the last 24 hours. On southerly slopes below 9,000' there were some wet loose slides from yesterday afternoon.
Wind slabs were still reactive today. We triggered 3 small, 3-8" deep x 5-15' wide, hard wind (1F+) slabs on convex test slopes well below the main ridgelines. 9,800', NE aspects. Also triggered one softer (4F) wind slab just below the high ridgeline, 10,200', NE aspect. 10-15' wide x 6-8" deep.
Snow stayed dry on northerly/shady slopes. Any sunny slopes got moist and had a crust formed by late this afternoon. We did not notice any fresh wet loose slides or roller balls on southerly slopes above 9,000'.
Stay alert for unstable drifts of snow, wind slabs formed last week are still breaking. Anticipate wet snow hazards to increase in size and distribution as the days get hotter this week.
We snagged an early morning tour to avoid the heat today and it (mostly) worked. We saw no avalanches, cracking or collapsing while out.
-We found a 2-4cm thick breakable crust on SE, S, SW, and W aspects that probably formed during Friday’s sunshine capping 6-10” of fresh snow above 9k’
-There was much less fresh snow below 9k’ (baked off?)
-Northerlies held stable soft snow!
-Small natural dry loose activity started around 11am on steep NE and E slopes initiating from around rocks/trees
-We sniffed out some south facing corn, but it was generally grabby/sloppy wherever a few inches of recent fresh snow remained