Monday, December 16, 2024

Shasta Snow Report

12/13 Ski tour from 7,500 feet through south and east facing terrain to the top of Gray Butte at 8,108 feet. 




An additional 15+ centimeters of new snow that bears a higher water content has capped yesterday's (12/12/24) 10-12 centimeters of dry snow. The total new snow in the past 48 hours is nearing 30 centimeters and is forming into slabs. Tonight, as the snowfall and wind intensify, the likelihood of encountering storm and wind slabs will become even more likely. There is a thin crust at the new/old snow interface that is isolated in distribution but forms an ideal bed surface for avalanches- this will be an interface to keep an eye over the next few days. 


14 comments:

  1. Centimeters? Where you from?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Upper Slobovia. (Hey, I didn't write it, just repeated it.)

      Delete
  2. Upper Slobovia? Joe Btfsplk is that you!?

    ReplyDelete
  3. A centimeter is about 7/16 of an inch and I round it to 1/2 an inch. Good enough for gov work. So 30 centimeters is 15 inches give or take and 15 centimeters 7 1/2 inches or so.

    ReplyDelete
  4. 1 centimeter is .43 inches. Where an inch being 2.54 centimeters exactly.
    30 centimeters is a bit over 11 inches. And on some scale, I am too

    ReplyDelete
  5. Er. That's .39 not .43...

    ReplyDelete
  6. 5 inches of new snow.

    ReplyDelete
  7. I aint no damn commie...speak American.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. The inch was defined in English law as far back as 1324 by Edward ll and was in use in England and Wales before that. The metric system was invented in France during or shortly after the French Revolution and became the official system in France in 1840. The communists did not invent either system.

      Delete
  8. There are two types of people , those that use the metric system and those that put men on the moon.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. ...and will do it again, soon. No slide rules this time.

      Nemo

      Delete
  9. when I'm driving through snow I prefer the accumulation reported in inches only
    'cause I know the height of the top of my axle (with snows) off the ground in inches not cms, though I much prefer to see my (own) weight in kilos

    ReplyDelete