Originally Posted by
glademaster
I read the avalanche bulletin regularly, it basically confirmed what I said in my initial post, albeit in slightly less concrete terms. What I was saying is that this faceted layer from October, while common on NW-E facing slopes, is not everywhere. Plenty of areas at lower elevations or on sunnier aspects do not have this faceted layer, as it melted off, except in isolated pockets.
This is all the more reason to be careful, as it's distribution was variable. I guess part of my point was that in the LCC area, a significant amount of the terrain where faceted October snow exists is in bounds at Alta and Snowbird. If I'm mistaken in terms of where the faceted layer exists, it's probably because I'm 1800 miles away, and basing my statements on weather reports, temperatures and webcam views of the area.
I'll be out in Utah for the winter in a little over 2 weeks, so I'm just trying to get a basic idea of what the snowpack is like at various aspects and at different elevations before I can dig pits myself.
While the number of incidents yesterday was scary and certainly should serve as a warning about the condition of the snowpack (Capt. Obvious here), they all happened in close proximity to one another in similar terrain.