Going from not enough
to too much in the next 24.
Two storms in the next two days, EACH forecast to dump 30-40 inches. If it really does dump like that, we're approaching 1982 scenarios. I don't envy the avalanche crews - it's going to be a mess. They won't be able to ski their ridge routes tossing charges (high winds,) and the avilauncher drifts too much in high wind to hit the trigger zones, so they'll have to depend on blind firing the howitzers to punch through the blizzard to protect the base area, which means no one will really have any idea what's stable and what's not when they can get up the mountain for hand control. BTW, Alpine also controls the access road, since the county doesn't have the capability. Which regularly means some of the triggered slides stretch far enough to cross the road and punch in garage doors, etc. Which then means some of the duffuses who built/bought in an avalanche slide path try to sue Alpine for damages. If Alpine just left it alone one winter an avalanche would sweep all those houses away and make it moot. |
Going from not enough
On Jan 4, 6:38 pm, lal_truckee wrote:
to too much in the next 24. Two storms in the next two days, EACH forecast to dump 30-40 inches. If it really does dump like that, we're approaching 1982 scenarios. I don't envy the avalanche crews - it's going to be a mess. They won't be able to ski their ridge routes tossing charges (high winds,) and the avilauncher drifts too much in high wind to hit the trigger zones, so they'll have to depend on blind firing the howitzers to punch through the blizzard to protect the base area, which means no one will really have any idea what's stable and what's not when they can get up the mountain for hand control. BTW, Alpine also controls the access road, since the county doesn't have the capability. Which regularly means some of the triggered slides stretch far enough to cross the road and punch in garage doors, etc. Which then means some of the duffuses who built/bought in an avalanche slide path try to sue Alpine for damages. If Alpine just left it alone one winter an avalanche would sweep all those houses away and make it moot. Sierra on-line snowfall sensors: http://cdec.water.ca.gov/snow/curren...OwensMono.html |
Going from not enough
On Jan 4, 6:38 pm, lal_truckee wrote:
to too much in the next 24. Two storms in the next two days, EACH forecast to dump 30-40 inches. If it really does dump like that, we're approaching 1982 scenarios. I don't envy the avalanche crews - it's going to be a mess. They won't be able to ski their ridge routes tossing charges (high winds,) and the avilauncher drifts too much in high wind to hit the trigger zones, so they'll have to depend on blind firing the howitzers to punch through the blizzard to protect the base area, which means no one will really have any idea what's stable and what's not when they can get up the mountain for hand control. BTW, Alpine also controls the access road, since the county doesn't have the capability. Which regularly means some of the triggered slides stretch far enough to cross the road and punch in garage doors, etc. Which then means some of the duffuses who built/bought in an avalanche slide path try to sue Alpine for damages. If Alpine just left it alone one winter an avalanche would sweep all those houses away and make it moot. Online snowfall monitors: http://cdec.water.ca.gov/snow/curren...OwensMono.html |
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