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Avalanche danger remains high

by Hungry Horse News
| March 10, 2012 6:43 AM

Avalanche risk remains considerable above 4,500 feet this weekend, as temperatures rise and freezing levels climb to 7,000 feet.

The Glacier Country Avalanche Center’s advisory issued on Friday, March 9, warned backcountry users to be cautious during periods of thaw and rising freezing levels, especially on south-facing aspects on or below steep and open slopes. Breaking cornices could also trigger slides.

Natural avalanches are possible, and human-triggered slides are likely, the center warns.

A party skiing March 7 on Divide Mountain near St. Mary, east of Glacier National Park, reported triggering a slide on an eastern aspect at about 6,800 feet. The group set off the slide from flat ground below the crown.

A member in the party recalled the incident in a report compiled by the avalanche center: “We were standing on the flat ground, a big whomph ensued, and I immediately saw a large propagation across the crest of the ridge. This was followed by a loud crack as the crown was establishing. Talk about being in the wrong place at the wrong time, as we were literally standing right underneath a slope that was currently sliding. A small group of burnt lodgepoles were the only ‘break’ in between us and the avalanche. Immediately, we began scurrying directly away from the slide, and luckily it stopped just shy of our skin track.”

No one was injured in the slide.

Avalanche center official Ted Steiner reported Friday seeing a large hard-slab slide on the northeast aspect of Cameahwait Mountain, near Essex. The slide ran into Essex Creek.