22-23

A group of snowmobilers captured an image of what we believe was a skier-triggered avalanche on Miller Mountain from 3/2. Photo: R. Stacy

Cooke City, 2023-03-06

From obs. "Around 4 or 5 pm today we rode out of Sheep Creek into the Miller Mountain area. When we looked at Miller there was a large avalanche that appeared to have occurred naturally (to our knowledge). It looked like the crown was 12-24'' and a few hundred feet wide. The debris looked fresh and must have occurred today. Given the depth we assumed it was windslab that had built up sometime in the last few days; however, hard to tell from so far away." Photo: R. Stacy

Cooke City, 2023-03-06

From obs. "Around 4 or 5 pm today we rode out of Sheep Creek into the Miller Mountain area. When we looked at Miller there was a large avalanche that appeared to have occurred naturally (to our knowledge). It looked like the crown was 12-24'' and a few hundred feet wide. The debris looked fresh and must have occurred today. Given the depth we assumed it was windslab that had built up sometime in the last few days; however, hard to tell from so far away." Photo: R. Stacy

Cooke City, 2023-03-06

wind slabs and buried weak layers

Date
Activity
Snowmobiling

On Buck Ridge today (3/5/23) we found fresh, unstable drifts and buried weak layers. Recent avalanche activity is a sign that buried weak layers could be triggered and cause large avalanches, even though we didn't see unstable results in our snowpack tests.

Be cautious of steep slopes, especially if they are wind-loaded and avoid steep slopes if you suspect buried weak layers exist. Recent snow being drifted into thicker slabs is adding weight to weak layers and may cause danger to rise.

Region
Northern Madison
Location (from list)
Buck Ridge
Observer Name
Alex Marienthal

Natural Avalanches near Miller Mountain

Date
Activity
Snowmobiling

Around 4 or 5 pm today we rode out of Sheep Creek into the Miller Mountain area. When we looked at Miller there was a large avalanche that appeared to have occurred naturally (to our knowledge). It looked like the crown was 12-24'' and a few hundred feet wide. The debris looked fresh and must have occurred today. Given the depth we assumed it was windslab that had built up sometime in the last few days; however, hard to tell from so far away. We also observed another smaller natural avalanche on an exposed ridge below Miller Mtn, this looks to have been about 12in deep and probably occurred on the same layer as the larger avalanche. Both were on N or NNW facing slopes in areas with heavy wind deposition.

Region
Cooke City
Location (from list)
Miller Mtn.
Observer Name
Randall Stacy

Good Test Scores IVO Bradley Meadow

Date
Activity
Snowboarding

Single pit (aspect: 100 deg, slope angle: 18 deg), two tests:

1. CTN

2. ECTX

- Lochlan Bennett, age 13, first snowpit (with assistance from a friend)

Region
Bridger Range
Location (from list)
Bradley Meadow
Observer Name
Lochlan Bennett