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Large Avalanche - Eddy Mountains

Location Name: 
Parks Creek Summit Area
Region: 
Mt Eddy
Date and time of avalanche (best estimate if unknown): 
Wed, 03/29/2023 - 3:30pm
Observation made by: 
Forecaster
Red Flags:
Recent loading by new snow, wind, or rain
Obvious avalanche path

Location Map

96067 Mount Shasta , CA
United States
41° 21' 48.5964" N, 122° 32' 48.6096" W
California US

Avalanche Observations

Details

A large avalanche big enough to bury or kill you was snowmobile triggered today in the Parks Creek area of the Eddy Mountains, just above the FS17 road, near Parks snow survey course. This avalanche was remotely triggered while riding the FS 17 road beneath the slope. The crown was estimated 1.5 to 3 feet deep and 600 feet wide. Debris ran over the road and several hundred feet into small trees below. Slope angle of start zone is 35–40 degrees, east and northeast facing in near treeline terrain, 6,600 feet. New snow from the past 24–36 hours, two to three feet deep, sits on a crust with a weak layer of graupel at the interface. Nobody was caught or injured.

Prior to this event, numerous small, test slopes were evaluated in the area with no red flags of danger. A test pit was dug on a similar aspect and elevation. Poor slab characteristics were observed with moderate to hard column test failures at the weak layer (old snow/new snow). Propagation was not observed in tests. 

A couple small, natural storm slabs were observed on a west/northwest aspect near 5,600 feet above Tamarack Flat.

Today hosted broken clouds with very light snow flurries for brief moments. The sun came out for periods of time. Wind was almost dead calm. A slight breeze could be felt out of the northeast over ridges. Evidence of previous wind loading was evident. Cornices and wind loaded slopes were observed. Clockwise, slopes west, north and east all observed wind loading. New snow measures anywhere from 15 to 20 inches above 5,000 feet. New snow amounts rapidly decrease below this elevation. Access/parking is still only about .75 miles up the FS 17 road from Stewart Springs. 

DATA CODE: SS-AM-D2-R3

  • 1. Date: 3.29.23
  • 2. Time: 1530 hours
  • 3. Observer: N Meyers
  • 4. Path Characteristics: Near Treeline
    • a. Observation Location: Parks/Eddy
    • b. Aspect: East and Northeast
    • c. Slope Angle in Starting Zone: 35-40
    • d. Elevation: 6,600 feet
  • 5. Event Characteristics
    • a. Type: Storm slab
    • b. Trigger: Snowmobile
    • c. Size: D2/R3
    • d. Snow Properties
      • i. Bed Surface: Melt-freeze crust
      • ii. Weak Layer: Graupel
      • iii. Slab: Storm snow
  • e. Dimensions
    • i. Slab Thickness: 15 to 36 inches
    • ii. Width: 600 feet
    • iii. Vertical Fall: 800 feet
  • f. Location of Start Zone: 6,800 feet, NTL
  • g. Terminus: 6,000 feet
  • h. Total Deposit Dimensions: 600 x 1000 feet
  • i. Avalanche Runout Angle: not measured

Photos

Characteristics

Avalanche Type: 
Slab
Trigger type: 
Snowmobiler
Slope: 
38degrees
Aspect: 
Northeast
Elevation: 
6 600ft.
Terrain: 
Near Treeline
Weak Layer: 
Storm Snow
Bed Surface: 
Old Snow
Crown Height: 
2 ft
Avalanche Width: 
600ft.
Avalanche Length: 
1 000ft.
Number of people caught: 
0
Number of partial burials: 
0
Number of full burials: 
0

Weather Observations

Details

Last 3 days weather data from Mount Eddy weather station, issued 3.29.23 at 06:30pm:



Statistics

Cloud Cover: 
75% of the sky covered by clouds
Blowing Snow: 
No
Precipitation: 
Snow
Accumulation rate: 
None
Air temperature: 
Below Freezing
Air temperature trend: 
Static
Wind Speed: 
Calm
Wind Direction: 
Northeast