0430 temp. at 6350′: 30.2 deg. & 85% RH
New snowfall: 3″
0515 temp. at 8650′ Tamarack TH: 16 deg.
New snowfall: 6-10″
Backcountry obs.:
This morning a measly 3″ of thick, new snow coated the ground just above lake level. As expected, totals increased dramatically with elevation and 6-10″ of cold, new, right side up snow had completely reset the backcountry in the Mt. Rose area.
Gusty winds from the SW – NW accompanied last night’s storm creating various textures and patterns (all soft) across the snow surface and a wide distribution of observable new snow totals. Some areas appeared to have no more than 6″ while others approached a foot. All previous tracks and crusts have been completely covered and are imperceptible underfoot.
While no obvious instabilities occurred while breaking trail to the summit, active windloading occurred on N-E-S aspects throughout the early morning. I anticipated unstable wind slabs on lee facing chutes and bowls, but did not trigger any instabilities despite my intentional efforts. The new snow appeared to have bonded well with underlying soft snow and crusts, and becomes generally lighter towards the top.
All this to say that the skiing is, once again, excellent. Another storm has wandered in and reset the snowpack, allowing skiers to lay down fresh tracks on a deep base. The new snow isn’t blower, but invites opening up elongated, fast powder turns with a springy base and not a hint of crust or hardness underfoot. Today’s a day to open it up and rip the most elegant line possible.
Weather and forecast thoughts:
March 2024 stands out as the gold star month of the winter. It started out with a massive dump of over 60″ at lake level and is now set to finish with a week-long parade of cold, medium-sized storms dropping just enough powder to reset the snow surface with cold, fun snow that has been largely stable.
Looking at the forecast, today will be partly cloudy and cold with highs around the lake in the middle 30s, 20s for the backcountry above 8000′. The strong sun angle and breaks in the clouds will heat up the new snow just enough to form crusts and density changes in sun-exposed areas, but persistent cloud cover will hopefully keep this less widespread than if today were completely bluebird. Tonight will be cold and partly cloudy.
Tomorrow another system arrives just in time for the weekend. Models this morning are trending wetter as the much-watched cut-off low taps into subtropical moisture as it drops south along the West Coast. This won’t be a big storm by Sierra standards, but has the potential to put down more snow than last night’s system over a longer period of time.
Snow showers will pick up in number and intensity tomorrow afternoon and into tomorrow night, continuing through Sat. and Sun. before tapering off Sun. evening. Zones above 8000′ and along the crest will receive the highest snow totals, however, decent amounts (3-8″) can be expected around town by storm’s end. In the backcountry up to 6″ falling every 12 hours or so from Fri. PM through Sun. AM looks probable. Temps will be in the 20s at night and 30s during the day with lower values in the mountains. The high sun angle will add instability to the atmosphere each afternoon, promoting convective showers that could put down brief periods of heavy snow (1-3″ per hour). A clap of thunder Sat. and Sun. afternoon isn’t out of the question with these showers.
By the time the system wraps up late Sun., another 12-16″ in the backcountry isn’t out of the question, maybe more if the storm wobbles a bit closer to our area and/or the subtropical jet kicks in a bit more than expected.
Next week starts out with a ridge of high pressure moving into the area promoting warmer temps and sunshine. Spring will return as highs climb into the 50s with lows dipping to freezing and below each night.
Later in the week, more cold, unsettled weather is showing up in medium range forecasts. A return to the cool, showery pattern looks possible, hopefully delivering more spring powder refreshes. Keep it comin’!