Saturday’s Fergi Fest

April 4th, 2010 — 10:00am

It’s quite an event at the end of Ferguson Ridge Ski Area’s normal season. A great community event with lots of socializing, some downhill racing, great skiing and of course the lawn chair race! The evening was filled with great entertainment – dancing!

The weather was splendid and last weeks’ big dump of snow provided for great coverage all over the mountain. Compare this years coverage with some previous years and most would agree that it looks like mid winter up there.

Enjoy the photos. Just a random few (can’t put them all up at once). Check out this blog for additional ones the next few days.

PS – The ‘I love Charlie’ T-shirts are in appreciation of all that Charlie Kissinger has done for Fergi and a wish for his continued good health.

A beautiful Fergi Fest day

The mens alpine downhill race

Ken Gebhardt - the mens alpine downhill winner

The lawn chair 'Super-Modified' downhill race

James Johnson (Joseph Hardware) left and Keith Stebbings. James was a contestant in the lawn chair 'Super-Modified'.

WAC staff. L to R: Dana Nave, Keith Stebbings, Charla Whiting, Ken Bronec, Roger Averbeck. Staff not present in photo: Penny Arentsen and Julian Pridmore-Brown.

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Winter Weather Advisory issued by NWS

April 2nd, 2010 — 11:30am

Updated information can be found at:

http://forecast.weather.gov/showsigwx.php?warnzone=ORZ050&warncounty=ORC063&firewxzone=ORZ635&local_place1=12+Miles+SE+Joseph+OR&product1=Winter+Weather+Advisory

Very strong winds and blowing and drifting snow will continue to intensify this afternoon and overnight. Mountain conditions likely to be quite severe through early Saturday morning.

Please use our Local Weather button and consult the wide range of National Weather Service products available to you or check the above link frequently for updates during this storm cycle.

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More Snow!

April 1st, 2010 — 2:51pm

The National Weather service is forecasting another late season storm. Wallowa County is presently in a winter storm watch area. The Northern Blue Mountains are in a Warning area. Snow totals could range up to almost a foot in some areas with snow levels dipping to 3500 ft. Current models put the bulk of the storm over the Wallowas later in the day on Friday. Keep up to date with the latest forecasts from the NWS before heading out this weekend!

Julian P. B.

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Director News – Weather Update

March 30th, 2010 — 11:44am

Winds have subsided substantially since last evening. They are now down in the manageable range and are likely to stay that way throughout the remainder of this storm cycle according to the NWS. Much instability will be with us for a few days more with off and on snow showers. As of today and this hour we have added between 1.5″ and 2″ of water weight to the snowpack. This is a substantial load on the snowpack and we are likely to see evidence of natural activity. Avalanche terrain is going to be very sensitive to the weight of a person right now, so beware. Travel with heightened awareness to these new developments when in or around avalanche terrain.

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Director News – Hazardous Mtn weather on our doorstep

March 28th, 2010 — 9:06am

I just got off the phone with the National Weather Service in Pendleton. It is not often that I would interrupt their workday (on a Sunday) but they are very kind in support of this avalanche center.

The newsA very strong system is eminent starting this afternoon and lasting at least throughout all day Monday. Very high winds coupled with heavy snowfall and heavy snowfall rates can be expected. Upper elevation ridges and summits will see extreme conditions with this system. Mid elevation locations especially in wind exposed terrain will see hazardous travel conditions. Please monitor the National Weather Service during this storm cycle for the latest weather updates to assist your backcountry travel plans. We suggest you use the Local Weather button to the left and scroll down to the NWS Aneroid Mountain Milepost Forecast to keep abreast of the changing conditions.

Alter your backcountry travel plans accordingly to remain safe.
Keith

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Dusting of Snow downtown Joseph

March 26th, 2010 — 9:23am

If I brought my venier caliper or micrometer outside this morning in downtown Joseph, I suppose I might have measured 0.200″ of snow. Not much. Mountains have received about 3″. Lingering flurries today in the mountains with continued instability clouds. Winds may be a little less strong on the peaks today than the very early morning forecasts originally suggested. Tomorrow will be a pleasant sunny day up high.

Hope Fergi is open tomorrow. I’m looking forward to it.
Today’s summary is hot off the press with lots of good stuff.
Keith

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Director News – Heavy rain, Heavy snow

March 22nd, 2010 — 7:30am

While the valley received heavy rain Sunday evening the mountains above about 6500′ received heavy wet snow. Depths were in the 6 inch range at the mid elevations (around 7500′). From springlike warmth the last three days to nearly winter today reminds us that although it’s spring officially now, winter ain’t over!

Julian and Keith were doing observations in the Aneroid Basin on Saturday and it was a warm hike in. Mostly sunny all day, south winds gusting a bit on the ridgetops but the basin was either a gentle breeze or dead calm. Several older slides occurred on the NE -> E aspects of Lookout Mtn there and we had a chance to study a flank of one slide for stability. Pic here is of Dollar Ridge on Saturday and notice there was no new avalanche activity there, much to our surprise.

All the details on Friday.
Keith

Dollar Ridge, Aneroid Basin on 3-20-10

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WAC achieves IRS 501(c)(3) !!

March 11th, 2010 — 8:11pm

This week we received word from the IRS that we have been granted 501(c)(3) status as a public charity. What this means to all of you who donate to us is that your donations and gifts are tax deductible to the extent allowed by law when you do your taxes.

Our 501(c)(3) status is retroactive to the day we were incorporated on July 27, 2009. So any donations you made to us during 2009 from July 27 onward is deductible. We are very excited about the IRS recognizing us in this way, since not only does it help you – our friends, donors, and sponsors – but it opens up our ability to apply for grants. Would there be anyone out there who would like to offer some volunteer time to assist us in grant writing?

As mentioned, the month of March is a time when we are experimenting a bit with our weekly summary. Changing things up a little, trying out different writing styles and editors. Please give us a little feedback on what you like, dislike, want more/less of, etc. Jot us a note to: info@wallowaavalanchecenter.org. Tell us also what you think of the website.

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Director News – Snowing in the Mtns

March 9th, 2010 — 9:31am

After a long spell of dry and warm conditions we can report 4″ to 6″ new snow in the Wallowas from the storm of the last 24 hours. Continued instability will be with us until Wednesday evening with another few inches accumulation. Then high pressure builds in for the remainder of the week.

WAC would appreciate those of you who use this site regularly to comment on the format of the weekly summaries during the month of March. We are experimenting with some different format ideas, styles of writing and so forth and would appreciate you jotting us a line on what you think about them. Offer thoughts on what changes you might like to see. This summer we’ll be taking all this into consideration as we plan our second full year of service to you next winter. Respond to info@wallowaavalanchecenter.org.

Please consider a donation to us so we can plan new things to offer come next winter. We are moving steadily forward to having a remote weather station on top of Mt. Howard with wind speed/direction and high/low/current temperatures for next winter season. We still need to purchase a couple remaining items, so donations will be used toward this endeavor. Use PayPal or send a check to the address found below.

Thanks,
Keith

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In Memory of Roger Thomas Roepke by Lisa Armstrong-Roepke

March 5th, 2010 — 7:03am

In Memory of Roger Thomas Roepke; February 21, 1959—March 7, 2009

This Sunday marks the one year anniversary of an avalanche that took the life of a fine man– husband, father and friend. There are no words to adequately convey the gratitude my sons and I share for our friends and for this community and especially for the Search and Rescue team that came to our aid. Despite our loss, we feel truly embraced by these incredible people that have helped us through this year. Roger would be so proud.

As we celebrate the life of an extraordinary man I would ask you to honor him by loving and respecting the back country as much as he did; be present and enjoy every moment. That is how Roger lived his life. His powerful spirit thrives within all of us.

Lisa Armstrong-Roepke
March 5, 2010

Tim Farrar, an avalanche forecaster in the Sierra Nevadas and good friend to us (The Roepke family) sent the following quote:

Snow means different things to different people. To a small boy/girl it is an inexhaustible supply of ammunition; when s/he makes a snowball s/he is utilizing two of snow’s special qualities; cohesion and compaction. To the merchant, it is an unmitigated nuisance to be scraped off his/her sidewalk; in a big city, snow can be a minor disaster that halts all forms of transportation, tears down power and telephone lines, and costs millions of dollars to get rid of. To the hydrologist it is the most perfect form of water storage; requiring no costly dams, it collects the moisture of an entire winter and releases that moisture gradually through the summer; without it the snow-fed rivers of the West would alternate between raging flood and blistering desert and life as we know it would be impossible. To the skier, snow is an ideal sliding surface for a pair of steel and plastic slivers attached to his/her feet, a combination that has reversed man’s age-old dread of winter; the mountains, avoided in the snow season by our forefathers, have become the playground of millions. Thus the nature of snow depends somewhat upon the eye of the beholder.

Lying on a mountainside, snow looks so innocent, so bland, and to the uneducated eye so unchanging, yet the avalanche hunter knows it to be the most changeable substance on Earth. From the moment the first molecule of water vapor floating around in the atmosphere condenses around some minute particle of dust, snow never really stops changing until it becomes water again, flows down to the sea and begins the cycle all over. The life of a snow crystal can be shorter than a butterfly’s, for it may melt on the way down and fall to Earth as rain. On the other hand, the life of a snow crystal may be measured in centuries if it happens to become part of a glacier. Be it for moments or eras, the nature of snow is that it never entirely stops changing. This is not of course, a unique property. Everything is changing in its own way and at its own pace.

~Montgomery M. Atwater-father of US Avalanche Science

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