0430 temp. at 6350′ in Carnelian Bay: 30.4 & 99% RH
No new snow
0530 temp. at 8400′ Incline Peak TH: 24 deg.
No new snow
Backcountry obs.:
When I came out of the backcountry yesterday, there was a mix of clouds and sun and high humidity. The snow at the TH had lost its cold feeling and water rivulets gushed down both sides of the road. With the cool temps. last night, I feared that warmth from yesterday had refrozen into crust on all aspects. I was wrong.
Skinning up Incline Peak I found a mix of breakable crust on any aspect that receives appreciable sunshine, and cold, dense Sierra cement in the trees and on all features facing NW-ENE. It’s still January and the sun angle is pretty low, so aspects receiving little to no sun can still stay cold and soft under the right conditions. If the airmass can dry out a bit over the next 24 hours, with cold overnights, N facing protected snow could still remain cold and crust free.
Incline Peak has been heavily skied, especially through the N. trees and NE side of the E. bowl. Good cold snow is still plentiful though in the right sheltered zones. Coverage continues to improve making for fun descents. Stability also looks to be improving, but the buried persistent weak layer is still out there, so conservative risk management remains prudent.
Forecast and weather thoughts:
The moist airmass left in the wake of Saturday’s storm was apparent this morning as low clouds, heavy hoar frost, and patchy fog adorned the Tahoe Basin. By mid morning, most low cloudiness and fog had burnt off giving way to a sunny, relatively warm day. Highs today are in the low 40’s around lake level. Tonight should cool off again and offer a repeat or close relative of this morning’s conditions as high pressure reigns.
Poor predictability and shifting model forecasts have plagued this winter and this week is no different. Looking to midweek and beyond, the trend towards warm and dry is changing to warm and unsettled.
Tues. will see the arrival of more clouds and rain/snow by Tues. night. Snow levels will initially start very high around 8500′, before falling after midnight and through Weds. am. Precip. will end Weds. am with fairly light storm totals. I wouldn’t expect any more than a few inches of wet snow, even along the crest, due to the warmth and high snow levels. This will be a mainly rain event for areas below 7000′.
The remainder of the work week will be warm and dry with high temps. in the low – mid 40’s around lake level. Sunny skies should prevail from Weds. pm though Fri. pm.
Fri. evening, things begin to shift once again as a train of storms takes aim on us from the Pacific starting next weekend and continuing deep into the following week. Models show these storms coming in on a strong Pacific jet traveling almost directly across the ocean from southern Japan. The mid-latitude placement of the jet will likely draw in milder Pacific moisture to keep each wave of storms fairly warm with snow levels near or above lake level.
This pattern shift is still quite a ways off, but at this point there’s no obvious cold signal interacting with the incoming, juicy subtropical jet, which trends towards a storm cycle of warm storms with higher snow levels. Time will tell as the work week wears on.