Tag Archives: Colorado

Snow.com dispatch: CAIC forecaster talks pain, powder in the backcountry

Nice dispatch from Devon O’Neil on Snow.com with a small look into the life and thoughts of Scott Toepfer, forecaster for Colorado Avalanche Information Center.

More here: http://buzz.snow.com/outdoor_adventure/b/weblog/archive/2010/10/14/avalanche-forecaster-talks-powder-pain-in-the-backcountry.aspx

 

Day 12 – Incognito

Geez, it feels like it’s been forever.  Watching the jet stream do it’s Col thing is getting old.  Knowing there would be new snow, but also knowing how funky and unstable  the current snowpack would be with the new weight, I decided to head up to Berthoud Pass and do some exploring on lower angle terrain.  Get some photos, shake out the kinks in my touring legs and, earn some pow turns.  Today did not disappoint.

The skin approach was a bit more difficult than expected as I worked my way up to treeline.  Felt like I was skining up bottomless pow, but in reality it was the 6 or 7″ new overnight on top of ground to surface facets.  pole strikes went straight through.  tough sledding on the steeper sections for sure.

Above treeline the snow was untracked and very dry/fluffy.  Skin up, shred pow.  skin up, shred pow.  skin up, shred pow….and so on.  Meadow skipping laps and that familiar flow and float.

Where is the snow?!

 NCEP Global Ensemble: US 15 days PQPF  – the 15-day forecast.

Depressing. (Source: NCEP/NOAA)

Day 11 – Berthoud

Berthoud Pass Puppy strikes again - east side

Still some freshies to be had more than 4 days after the upslope storm.  NW winds re-shifted the oddly shaped upslope drifts, filled back in some of the usual spots, and created a fun day.

still wondering when the season will really begin. and still on the rock board…miss my pow sticks.

 

 

Day 10 – Upslope goodness

First day of winter solstice 2011 came in with a bang here in the Front Range.  14″ at my house and that means shreddable lines in South Boulder County.

New lines - BikeinRidge

Good times with C-Low and Don from WildyX.  Don toured in from his house, Curtis and I toured in from 66th.  2 miles across the top of the mesas, scoping possible lines and enjoying the views as the storm lifted and the sun came out.  We scored!    pretty frickin cool when my commute back home was 3 minutes.

already scanning the mesas in my backyard for next turns and shreddable lines.  I guess big Upslopes aren’t that bad after all!

Day 9 – Mary Jane Mountain

Transceivers - Bracketing and pinpoint search discussion. Photo: Teddy Eick

Today was the first of several on-snow Avalanche Awareness classes put on by Friends of Berthoud Pass.  A 1.5-hr classroom session in the Mary Jane lodge, followed by 3 hours on snow, where we touched upon safe travel techniques, introductory beacon searching, shoveling and hasty pit discussions.

Perfect class for the rider who is thinking about getting into the backcountry, and a first stepping-stone for the aspiring BC enthusiast.   Super sunny day, shedding layers and good conversations with the group I was leading.  So nice to get back into the education side, and see the wheels begin to turn up awareness for the attendees.

I'm Getting down for a bracketing example Photo: Teddy Eick

Transceiver discussion Photo: Teddy Eick

 

Day 8 – Eldora

Challenger lift with Seth and KW

When there hasn’t been ay new snow recently, sunny (soft) hardpack is pretty freaking fun.  Corona was open, and with the exception of the heel U-bar on my hammerheads slipping (which were replaced quickly by WildyX- Thanks!), mid mountain, I’d say this was a fantastic day.

 

Early Season ‘Col’ putting the brakes on Northern CO snow

from the Colorado Avalanche Information Center’s Daily Backcountry forecast for today 14 December 2011:

“…The next low pressure system digging south from the Pacific Northwest look less impressive for Colorado as it approaches.  Models are starting to agree, and indicate the system will split around us. A closed low will pinch off and dig well to our south, and the northern jet and associated moisture will pass well to our north. Unfortunately this means Colorado stays mostly high and dry into the weekend.”

This has been a recurring theme here in northern Colorado since Mid November’s start of ski season.  While our brethren in Silverton, Purgatory and Wolf Creek have been the big winners this early season, fresh pow has been somewhat scarce for the rest of the state.

GOES WEST - Colorado sitting in the "Col"

The weather patterns and storm tracks we have been seeing to date have been splitting in two, right around Colorado in the middle … in the “Col” as forecasters put it, using a term most known to climbers and mountaineers for the low spot in between two high ridges, or the saddle.  In meteorology terms, a Col means the point of lowest pressure between two anticyclones or the point of highest pressure between two cyclones.  nerdy?

The dreaded description From the National Weather Service:

THE FORECAST AREA WILL SIT UNDER A
COL IN THE SYNOPTIC SCALE SPLIT FLOW. WE WILL REMAIN POSITIONED
BETWEEN THE NORTHERN BRANCH NORTH-WESTERLIES AND A STRONG CUTOFF LOW
OVER NORTHERN BAJA.

In this case it’s a low spot of snowfall probability caused by  high pressure -  putting the “Col” in Colorado recently, and well, since high pressure usually means “NO SNOW”… it has a tendency to make powderhounds and dirtbags from Monarch north a bit irritable.  :)   Aspen, you scored nicely, so keep on living the dream.

Never fear, we are only halfway through December…. right??

PRAY4SNOW!

Thanks to: Colorado Powder Forecast and Summit Voice Daily for inspiring this post.