[MCR] Bugaboos to Rogers Pass Ski Traverse, April 20-29th, 2014

Public Mountain Conditions Report mcr at informalex.org
Wed Apr 30 14:40:56 EDT 2014


We completed a ski traverse from the Bugaboos to Rogers Pass yesterday
under clear skies and with cool temperatures. We had very unsettled weather
on the trip with about 30-60cm of storm snow in the alpine, but
temperatures remained cool and travel conditions were good throughout the
traverse. The snowpack was more of a settled winter snowpack than a true
spring snowpack. North aspects still had dry snow as low as 2000m
yesterday. Valley bottom travel was supportive even late in the day and
only very thin solar aspects had gone completely isothermal. Early morning
travel was very good the last couple days with the crust breaking down by
early afternoon. Glaciers had more than 3.5m of snow and glacier travel was
straight forward with the exception of a couple wind scoured areas.

We saw very little avalanche activity on the traverse. Solar triggered
slides to size 2 out of steep solar slopes were becoming more common on the
last two days, and several cornice failures and small wind loaded slabs to
size 2 on North aspects were observed mid traverse following a storm. The
one anomaly was a size 3.5 off the SW face of Mt Macoun failing on a deep
weak layer in the last several days.

Our avalanche concerns consisted of cornice failures, loose wet sluffs, and
deep slabs if things stayed warm.

The traverse was in very good shape. Here are a few specific comments:

- We ascended the Bugaboo - Snowpatch col using the narrow climber's
left gully under Snowpatch which avoids the larger slopes of the main col.
- The crevasses on the Vowel Glacier descent were more open than we have
seen before.
- Gaining the Malloy Glacier and the Conrad Icefield was straightforward
with very good coverage.
- All the descent routes around Mt Syphax seemed to be in good shape. We
used the descent of the "Action Direct" ski run to Malachite Creek.
- The Carbonate Glacier was well covered with the exception of the final
50 meters to gain the descent ridge at about 2800m where the snowpack was
quite shallow. Bare ice and open crevasses were showing just above this
elevation making the higher bench access hazardous.
- The steep S slopes leading up through the rock bands to the Beaver
Overlook were thin and becoming isothermal but provided good step kicking
before sunrise.
- The route down the Grand Glacier from Mt Sugarloaf appears to be
skiable but is quite broken. We avoided this area due to very poor
visibility and only observed it from the Deville Glacier ascent.
- The Deville and Illecillewaet Glaciers had very good coverage and
minimal crevasse concerns.

A great spring ski tour!
--
Conrad Janzen and Tom Wolfe
ACMG Mountain Guides
Banff Mountain Guides <http://www.banffmountainguides.com>
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