25 February, 2017

What does the scale above mean to you as a skier or snowboarder in the Gulmarg backcountry? Remember, this advisory is for the Gulmarg backcountry, which means the terrain that is outside of Gulmarg Ski Area. The red areas in the photo below are the Gulmarg backcountry, and the green area is Gulmarg Ski Area. This advisory does not apply to the green zone ski area. Read more here.

For ski area updates during the day please join Gulmarg Avalanche Advisory page on Facebook: http://bit.ly/2jowwOM.

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Snowpack Discussion
25 February 2017 –  Avalanche danger in the Alpine (above 3000 meters) is Moderate (2) today. Natural avalanches unlikely, human triggered avalanches possible.  Avalanche danger at Treeline (2500m-3000m) and Below Treeline (<2500m) is Low (1). Natural and human triggered avalanches unlikely. Watch out for unstable snow on isolated terrain features at Treeline and Below Treeline, especially in shady North-facing steep terrain.  Reactive small wind-slabs exist beneath ridgetops and in mid-slope isolated terrain features on Northerly aspects above 3000 meters. It should be mentioned that large deep wind slabs are still sitting in almost all of the start zones of the large North/Northeast facing backcountry bowls of Mount Apharwat. You could trigger one of these slabs today.  Choose terrain wisely.  Avoid skiing and riding beneath cornices or jumping off of cornices and shock loading the slope at the top of massive start zones today. Avalanche danger is Moderate (2) on all aspects above 3000 meters due to wind depositing small slabs on all aspects. The wind has prevailed from the South/Southwest in past days yet the landscape channels snow transport and slabs can be present even on South aspects. Look closely, choose wisely. Active transport of snow into the tops of North facing backcountry bowls was observed yesterday afternoon.

http://www.deepsnowsafety.org/index.php/. We now have enough snow in the conifer forests for skiers and riders to get trapped in tree wells. Read more about this phenomenon in the link above. It causes several fatalities each year in other ski regions of the globe.

http://mountainhub.com/

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See daily snow observations, snow pits, and data from the Gulmarg Avalanche Advisory. Sign up for a free Mountain Hub account.

Avalanche Problem #1 – Wind Slab

Release of a cohesive layer of snow (a slab) formed by the wind. Wind typically transports snow from the upwind sides of terrain features and deposits snow on the downwind side. Wind slabs are often smooth and rounded and sometimes sound hollow, and can range from soft to hard. Wind slabs that form over a persistent weak layer (surface hoar, depth hoar, or near-surface facets) may be termed Persistent Slabs or may develop into Persistent Slabs.  Wind Slabs form in specific areas, and are confined to lee and cross-loaded terrain features. They can be avoided by sticking to sheltered or wind-scoured areas.

Danger Aspects

 

 Ski Area Timings (25 February 2017)

Phase 1 – 8:15am – 4:30pm (last cabin 4:15pm) Phase 2 – 8:45am – 4:00pm (last cabin at 3:45pm)*
Chair Lift* – 8:45am – 4:00pm (last chair at 3:45pm)

Beacon TrainingToday there are (1) beacons buried on Merry Shoulder today.  The beacon training area here in Gulmarg is located on Merry Shoulder. The orange dot (see photo below) indicates where a red flag is next to a large birch tree. This is the “point last seen”. Start your search here. We have one, two, and three beacons buried here daily.  Please do not dig up the beacons, simply cycle through your Primary (signal) search, Secondary (flux line) search, Pinpoint search, and then Probing. A probe strike indicates the end of your search. If you’re interested in learning more, please come by Gulmarg Ski Patrol base at the bottom of the chair lift.

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Next avalanche talk is Tuesday, 28 February 2017 at 7:30pm at Pine Palace Resort. Pine Palace Resort is located in Gulmarg meadow. Talks will continue every Tuesday night at 7:30 pm through 28 March, 2017.