Avalanche danger for these RMNP hikes?
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Re: Avalanche danger for these RMNP hikes?
Thanks everyone again for your feedback; I now have some new reading material added to my book list. One more question: it sounds like most of those hikes are a no-go in the winter; at what point in the year do they become safe? For some of them, do you need to wait until all the snow is gone, or is there a point in the season when the snow is consolidated enough to be safe from an avy perspective?
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Re: Avalanche danger for these RMNP hikes?
The area from Odessa on down should be safe. The winter route from Odessa to Fern Lk used to just follow the creek instead of using the summer trail. However the East Troublesome fire burned some of that, so I don't know if it is still passable due to possible downed trees.rdp32 wrote: ↑Tue Jan 24, 2023 1:05 pmThat makes sense. Once you get to Odessa, is it avy safe the rest of the way to the Fern Lake TH? (I like the idea of a 1-way trip from Bear Lake to Fern Lake in the winter, enabled by a car/bike shuttle)DaveLanders wrote: ↑Mon Jan 23, 2023 6:52 pm It is possible to descend from Lk Helene to Odessa, but I wouldn't use the summer trail to do so. Instead it is better to go more directly from the north side of Lk Helene.
Doing these hikes in the spring while there is still snow is definitely possible, and often done. The avalanche hazard will be less, but you may still have to worry about wet slides depending on the weather that day, whether or not it froze the night before, etc.
Reading about all of this on the internet is better than nothing, but it's not a substitute for going with more experienced people, either as a formal class, or with friends acting as mentors, so you can get an understanding of their decision making process.
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Re: Avalanche danger for these RMNP hikes?
The snow field above Peacock Pool on the way to Chasm lake can often be safe. It's the right slope angle but gets blown into a low-energy pencil-hard slab pretty quickly. Again, knowing how to assess danger is pretty important. I'd bet my lunch that 75% of the brojangles climbers heading up there don't bother to assess safety, other than poking it with an ice tool a few times, and just follow the boot prints across. So, given the prime slide terrain combined with high usage but relatively small number of people caught in avys, speaks somewhat to it's safety.rdp32 wrote: ↑Tue Jan 24, 2023 1:09 pm Thanks everyone again for your feedback; I now have some new reading material added to my book list. One more question: it sounds like most of those hikes are a no-go in the winter; at what point in the year do they become safe? For some of them, do you need to wait until all the snow is gone, or is there a point in the season when the snow is consolidated enough to be safe from an avy perspective?
Again, knowing how to assess it is still key.
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Re: Avalanche danger for these RMNP hikes?
Black Lake is a popular snowshoeing trip, been up myself. The Tarn can be good also. Chasm on the other hand is very well-known to have avalanche danger due to the slope angle on Lady Washington.
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Re: Avalanche danger for these RMNP hikes?
The snow slope before Chasm is currently very stable, with a good boot pack.
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Re: Avalanche danger for these RMNP hikes?
Generally agree with you, Dave. I say "generally" because I recollect that there was a slide there in the 70's, I think (?) a couple of people were caught. But yeah, usually a hard styrofoam slab there. Fwiw, I dug a pit there once out of curiosity and it was hard all the way to the rocks, no apparent layers at all. That said, the terrain trap in the slot above Peacock Pool has always worried me, and once in maybe marginal conditions when I was solo I went up to the base of the cliffs above to bypass that section. Just an uneasy I-see-dead-people feeling.Dave B wrote: ↑Wed Jan 25, 2023 7:34 amThe snow field above Peacock Pool on the way to Chasm lake can often be safe. It's the right slope angle but gets blown into a low-energy pencil-hard slab pretty quickly. Again, knowing how to assess danger is pretty important. I'd bet my lunch that 75% of the brojangles climbers heading up there don't bother to assess safety, other than poking it with an ice tool a few times, and just follow the boot prints across. So, given the prime slide terrain combined with high usage but relatively small number of people caught in avys, speaks somewhat to it's safety.rdp32 wrote: ↑Tue Jan 24, 2023 1:09 pm Thanks everyone again for your feedback; I now have some new reading material added to my book list. One more question: it sounds like most of those hikes are a no-go in the winter; at what point in the year do they become safe? For some of them, do you need to wait until all the snow is gone, or is there a point in the season when the snow is consolidated enough to be safe from an avy perspective?
Again, knowing how to assess it is still key.
-Tom