3/2/11
Howdy all,
It’s been a few days since the last blog, sorry I’ve been busy in the backcountry. Snow for us tapered off last weekend but conditions on Monday in East Vail illusustrated the impact of wind loading has on the zone. With gusty winds out of the SW, standing on top of old mans cornice we could watch as the snow transport trundles over the edge and loads Old Man’s cornice. While other aspects in EV remained tracked and without evidence of new snow the area of old mans was refreshed. Even between runs, the cornice we controlled was filled in again, and even bigger after just two hours.
Snow transport is a huge reason that EV has great conditions, but is an added danger in slab production, especially the top areas under cornices. Two runs in Old Mans were fresh and deep, with the top scarp moving with the cornice cut. The middle skied well and stability below the obvious windload. Waiting now for the real reset button to hit us, waiting for the next warm system to move in. See ya.
EVI West Wall Edit 02.21.11
A four minute, almost full run through East Vail via the West Wall. Pretty Lights supplies the tunes. Those skittles didn’t know what hit ’em…
Report from 2/25
Howdy EV schralpers,
Snow keeps coming and so do the reports of instability in our favorite areas. Big J an DJ hit up Benchie first thing on Friday in the seven turned twenty one inches in EV. DJ dropped in and set off a slide in the upper rollover that ran about fifty feet wide and into the first bench. New snow only with no step down into the previous layers and stopped before the cliff band.
As spring approaches, I have a wary eye on the snowpack as temps and snow densities are changing. As alway our main concern is emerging deep slab instability, things that go big and run to the flats. The new storm that rolled in from Cal has much warmer temperatures and denser snow. Interested to see if the stability is better with a day of settling and new on top with the warmer temps.
Skied a tweeners to the ridge yesterday, enjoyed great deep snow in the bonus pockets and beyond.
It’s big kooky Saturday in the zone. Watch above you and stay classy east vail
Moving snow reports 2/20-2/24
Well it has been an active week for the EVI crew. Seven inches Sunday night with high winds loaded EV with probably triple that amount of low density but wind whipped snow. The cornice sizes above old mans and benchmark were indicators or just how the prevailing winds were favoring loading of north through west aspects. Monday was especially active, as our morning run in Old Mans saw Big J set off small slab underneath the cornice on the scarp. A small soft slab about 20 meters across and foot deep broke on his second turn and carried him toward the right side of the run. Down below I was able to see him get white roomed and pop out unscathed, but undeniable indicator that the new and old snow interface wasn’t on the same page. The windslab was active and old mans was grumpy. The snow was splashy and deep faceshots and thigh deep fresh.
Second run I went back solo to benchmark and teed it up left side of mushroom rock, through the choke. Upper left of Benchie had ran abut a third of the width of the upper run about 50 yards down on the new soft slab. Able to run it fast and got through the left side slot with no problems and skied the rest of the run in glorious pow, cutting over to the ridge and ended up skiing the trees on the north ridge down.
Third run I hooked up with Paul from EVI and went back to Old Man’s for another go at the right side. Although John had set off a small wind slab our first run, the right side had skied very well and with the cornice kicking we had done the first run, I figured we could safely enter and hug the right side by the trees and enjoy the goods. I had Paul go first and directed him to stay right on the ridge after the entrance and not test the first gully left in to the skier’s left of old mans, a convex, roll over into a gully that steepens in excess of 35 degrees with a small cliff crowning the skier’s left. It acts as a thin spot in the slab and if you ski by it can act as a trigger.
In my time I have seen Old Man’s rip in various spots and with varying results. From small sluffs to the entire bowl, old mans is as active a part of EV as any. It demands respect and knowledge to test it, especially in the middle and the far skiers left known as CDC. This area in particular is responsible for a number of close calls, injuries and fatalities in the years I have skied in EV. Protocol, decision making and big mountain skiing skills are required to get in and out fast, in the right area and at the right time anywhere in EV but especially in Old Mans on a black flag day.
Paul dropped in and followed the ridge to first bench without incident. However instead of hugging the right side, Paul ventured into first gully skier’s left by the rock and triggered a soft slab that pushed him down and took his ski. At about 3 feet deep although it was only fifty feet across, it packed a punch and ran to the flats. Video of the slide from Paul’s perspective was posted a few days ago, and it’s worth a look.
Being on top and watching the toe of the slide emerge with no sign of Paul was a tense moment. I took a deep breath and reached for my beacon. I had a decision to make. If Paul was buried, of course he needed my immediate assistance. If he was just wallowing, my dropping in would put him at risk for a second slide and put us both in danger. Two people in the zone at the same time was a last option. I hollered and waited, giving myself ten seconds to either let him get his shit together or drop. Just as I was about to hit receive on my tracker, I saw his pole wave up behind the roll over, signaling he was still above the surface. His ski was 300 feet below sticking straight out of the snow. Lucky on all accounts, a thigh deep day on one ski would take hours to get out.
Paul was lucky, he made a mistake and got off easy. If the slab was big or would have ripped above him, things would have been much worse. In my experience in guiding formally or informally, the human factor is the hardest variable to control. Powder frenzy, nerves overconfidence are things which are impossible to control. If you point out hazards to people, inevitably someone will ski into or wherever or whatever you have specifically pointed out not to ski into or towards. Human nature. Paul is ok, that’s all that matters really.
Tuesday I was worked and managed only a single but amazing run on King Aurthurs. The weather was dramatically better, with calm winds, blue skies and moderate temps. It was nice to take a solo run and tour into the old growth pines up to the crown. A fair number of tracks, but stability was much improved in the sheltered tree chute, and snow was still amazing. Thoughts from the day before had me close to the right side trees and wary of the superhighway size slide path that is the King A’s run. The snow warranted a second and even a third run, but I was crushed from the day before and had to take it easy.
Got a surprise message Thursday from our EVI slednecker Tdiz from Vail pass reporting a sled triggered slide under the main cornice up on ptarmigan ridge. North facing and wind loaded the two foot crown spanned about 100 feet across, triggered when Tdiz was sidehilling underneath the cornice. Notice a pattern in instability? Windloaded areas under cornices touchy. Be careful out there all and with new snow coming this week watch for more activity to come.
Also we will have videos and pictures uploaded in the next couple days of these recent EV runs. Check back and see for yourself what’s going on out East.
Saturday 2/19
Saturday was the beginning of the southwesterly storm and provided 4 inches of fresh on the mountain and as always doubled that total in EV. My run was a good one, hit the right side of the west wall in the tee line. It was a decent run, landing off the middle cliff was soft and skiing was improving rapidly, with no observed naturals and little sluffing and amazing light. Check the video of the run coming up, it’s a good one.
Snow Cycle Summary 2/19-2/21
Trying to sum up this last cycle. Let’s start with the rant about southwesterly storms. Hit or miss for us usually with warm temperamental storms that can pass us by. Or dump rain. Bottom line is any time there’s a pineapple express and they call for 2 feet here, take it with a grain of salt and watch it. No exception for the last storm cycle. Calling for the big one, we got a fraction of what they called for, 4 inches on sun and a called 7 monday morning. Don’t get me wrong, plenty in ev for an awesome day off and an interesting change in the snow stability, but give me the north westerlies any day of the week.
The storm started as warm and wet with promise got windy and stayed off our track, unusual as we have had the storm track on our side for the year. Wind picked up and it seemed the snow line for the storm stayed just to our south. I thought I actually saw the boundary of snow around Mt Massive on my way up to Benchmark on Saturday.
Sunday was a bit of a surprise, as I thought the storm had passed us by. The seven inches was light an fluffy and the strong southwesterly winds loaded ev in typical fashion, turning the seven into two feet in the zone, making the skiing excellent but touchy for Sunday and Monday. Upcoming are trip reports for the last three days…
Mini Slide in EV 02.21.11
With recent snowfalls in East Vail, the team has been busy hitting the local terrain for analysis, and a bit of fun. Lots more to come in the next few days including localized field write ups and a couple lengthy video edits.
For now, we felt it important to share that two members of our team were caught in small slides the other day on OM in the EV chutes — we caught this little bit on video. It’s not much, but it should give everyone an idea of what the snow pack can be like underneath the fluff. More details to come, so stay tuned…
Friday EV Report 02/18/11
Hey all,
Did an East Vail yesterday on the 12 in. of new. Didn’t feel like it as most of the snow fell early on Thursday morning, upwards of 2 inches an hour it seemed. Warmer temps on friday and the denser wetter snow helped settle it fast and only felt like 6 or so on friday.
Able to kick off sizable cornice chunks on right side of benchmark that propagated into a decent slide over the cliff band and into the flats. Not recommended to mess with cornices, but a great stability test if you can do it safely. Always impressive to see moving snow at work and a good reminder about how fast and powerful slides move. We have reached our average for snow and are looking on NOAA at a wall moving in from Utah, winter storm warning in effect, reset button waiting to be hit.
Going to be a crazy crowded weekend in EV watch above you for people and expect major changes in stability with the storm moving in. Stay tuned…
Bighorn pit report
Hey all,
Took a few days off from ev waiting for the reset button to be hit. Big J and I took the opportunity to head up bighorn trail to the cabin. The day was bluebird, calm and April warm, perfect for skinning up.
The terrain in the drainage was spectacular, west facing alpine and filled in nicely. We saw some folks teeing it up early on the hike. No observed naturals anywhere and no activity from the bold skittles sending it. John and I were both enlightened to say the least at the possibilities for skiing big lines up to and around the cabin. The Gore with good snow is simply amazing.
After getting to the cabin we decided to head up above the cabin to check out terrain and snow. We stopped at about 11800 and dug a pit before we crossed a 34 degree W facing slope. Total depth was 230 cm. Got a CT25 with a q2 shear at 60cm. CTN for the rest of the column. Top 10 cm windblown soft onto of fist destiny snow, gradually turning to four finger of settled snow around 110 cm. Didn’t see any significant crust, ice or hoar layers and nicely homogeneous snow pack for Colorado. Pulling on the column with a shovel blade produced a second shear at 200cm, q2 little pop and failing on faceting old storm snow.

Suprised at the pit, actually with no layers of doom present and the snowpack layering right side up so far, soft to firm with no significant temperature gradient. Game on. We crossed the slope and headed back towards home. Planning on returning with some time to stay at the cabin and tee it up this spring. Awesome day and pleasantly suprised with moderate stability.
Mushroom Bowl Edit
A little video from early February in mushroom bowl – side country @ Vail. Snow pack was good and deep…if a bit thick. We were able to see a few natural slides on the north facing cliffs leading down into the bowl, but the lower portions seemed solid. A more detailed snow report, including details from a pit dig coming soon…stay tuned.







