Avalanche Watch
What: Heavy snowfall and strong winds are increasing avalanche danger across the mountains of Northern and Central Utah, as well as Southwestern Utah and Southeast Idaho. Forecasters at the Utah Avalanche Center expect dangerous, complex avalanche conditions to develop on many slopes this week, with large natural and human-triggered avalanches likely.
When: This Avalanche Watch is issued on Tuesday, 2/17/26 at 6:00 AM MST through 6:00 AM MST Wednesday, 2/18/26.
Where: The Avalanche Watch is for the mountains of Northern, Central, and Southwestern Utah, as well as Southeastern Idaho.
Impacts:
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Dangerous avalanche conditions are expected to develop on many slopes.
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Avalanches can be triggered on slopes steeper than 30 degrees. They may also be triggered remotely (from a distance) or from below.
What to do:
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Avoid traveling on or underneath steep terrain at mid and upper elevations in the backcountry.
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Carry and know how to use avalanche rescue equipment, including a transceiver, shovel, and probe.
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Find safer riding conditions on slopes less than 30 degrees with no overhead hazard.
For updated avalanche information, visit www.utahavalanchecenter.org
Avalanche Watch vs. Warning: The UAC issued our first Avalanche WATCH of the season yesterday and extended it through tomorrow morning. We issue WATCHs when we believe the criteria for an Avalanche WARNING—the most severe avalanche alert product we have—may be met in the next 24-48 hours. More info on each of these from Bruce Tremper and Drew Hardesty HERE.
Bear River Lodge "Stay and Play Avalanche Course": March 19th-22nd in the Uintas. This course is designed for snowmobilers by snowmobilers, where you will learn avalanche rescue, riding skills, and how to survive in the backcountry. Come enjoy all the luxury offerings at Bear River Lodge and improve your skills along the way. Details and sign up HERE.
Last night, the first in a series of storms arrived on SW flow, which mostly meant wind for the Ogden zone. Temps dropped from the high 20s F to mid teens F overnight. Winds ripped out of the SW across the highest ridgelines in the 30-40s mph, gusting into the 680s at the top of Strawberry. The front of this first storm moved through quicker than expected.
This morning, mountain temps are in the low to mid teens F, and moderate to strong SW winds continue. Not much snow has fallen on the Ogden Skyline, with Powder Mountain reporting an anger inch as of 0700.
Today into tonight, a series of small storms will bring some light snow showers. These will favor the mountains East of Eden, and largely leave the Ogden Skyline feeling left out. SW winds will decrease throughout the day to 20-30s mph, and temps will be in the mid to high teens F. We can expect the following:
- Less-favored areas (Ogden Skyline): Trace-1" snow and up to 0.1" H2O by 5 pm tonight
- More-favored areas (Pow Mow, Monte Cristo): 2-5" snow and 0.2-0.4" H2O by 5 pm
Looking ahead, the cold front moves in tonight into early tomorrow morning. We can expect a shift to NW flow for tomorrow into Thursday.
Paige and I got to get out with Corey Kruse of Snowbasin yesterday.
Two reports from Saturday include:
- Josh Martineau on Bountiful Peak
- Derek DeBruin on Cutler Ridge
Both Josh and Derek reported a poor snowpack structure of faceted snow.
You can view all recent observations here.