The secret way to Throop is from Crystal Lake. It is 3500β vertical but the trails are good and the grades are reasonable the whole way.
The secret way to Throop is from Crystal Lake. It is 3500β vertical but the trails are good and the grades are reasonable the whole way.
This was yesterday so yeah π
Wrekt
(no snow sports enthusiasts were harmed* in the making of this video)
*seriously
Also, it looks like Mountain High is doing a $249 college Cali pass if you get 4+ people. That is a serious steal, thatβs like what I was paying Les Otten for 20+ years ago in the American Skiing Company days lol. www.thecalipass.com
No one can say Mountain High didnβt give it their all with snowmaking! NW face of Baldy showing a lot of snow - I think north slopes above 8500β still have a decent amount of snow and on a warm day the Throop trees will be nice!
Hot enough for a heat advisory in the basin tomorrow. Also there were strong winds in Azusa due to northerly component to the wind and mountain wave activity. Usually the 210 corridor is protected from Santa Anas but not under this setup. A much stronger but similar event during the Eaton Fire.
Classic Santa Ana winds with upper support from a cold Great Basin high. Down to ~25F in Wrightwood last night and Mountain High was able to make snow. 42F at 7000β and 77F at 300β / that is pretty much pure adiabatic heating (downslope winds). 35F difference, at the dry lapse rate it would be 37F.
But for my money the best view of deep time is Baden Powell from Mountain High, with the Vincent Thrust Fault cutting across the mountain - an ancient sea floor diving down into the earth, exhumed for us to be awestruck.
Table Mtn is spiritually a lot like Snow Valley - and in fact itβs a slice of the San Bernardino Mtns relocated to the San Gabriels by our friendly transform faults.
Last weekend the kids and I hit Snow Valley (last pic) Saturday and Mountain High on Sunday. I love Snow Valleyβs view of the high San Gabriels and Gorgonio, and its ancient boulder-strewn topography with decomposed granite soil is a stark contrast to Blue Ridgeβs tumultuous Pelona Schist.
Table Mtn is a special place for me because of all the great summer memories I have there, and Iβm so lucky I was able to add winter to that. As always with the San Gβs the terrain gets bigger when you get back in there, but I still made it home at 1:58pm for my 2:00pm meeting.
I knew Iβd have to hike back up whatever I skied down but I couldnβt resist. The campground would be better in firmer faster snow because itβs so flat, but that would be bad for the steeps below, making it a bit of an enigmatic pursuit.
Before all the snow melted (2/23/26) I checked off one thatβs been on my list for a long time: Table Mtn campground with its big beautiful pines, desert views, and mellow slopes. The snow went surprisingly far down the north side and the slopes got a lot steeper there!
Weβre lucky we dodged that one but wow a lot of snow melted in a week.
And after that storm cycle, right back to the pattern weβve had all winter of above-freezing temperatures all night at the 7000β-8000β level, with even Wrightwood getting the inversion. π
A sparkling clear day in the Central Valley! Half Dome in Yosemite was visible from my Keyes Road viewpoint. #halfdome
All I want is that sequence of storms, every week, from November 15 through April 15. Is that too much to ask for?
The line clearly went that day in March but I didnβt try it. And sometime between March and May, it went in an enormous avalanche. I was there before and I was there afterβ¦ I knew it was dangerous, and still is, but I still feel the pullβ¦ does that line go today, after the recent storms?
My heart goes out to everyone affected by the Castle Peak avalanche disaster. A lot of people lost someone close, maybe even more than one person. Itβs reminded me of my own personal white whale in Sheep Canyon. March 2023 found the cliffs and chutes buried under a tremendous amount of snow.
π
Hundreds of pupfish at Salt Creek in Death Valley! The flood damaged boardwalk has been replaced and is a nice walk. The fish have survived here since the ice ages in water that at times is three times as salty as the sea and sometimes as much as 100Β° (1/2)
The bad thing about being a SoCal backcountry skier is you might have almost no snow in early February. The good thing about being a SoCal backcountry skier is that you only need one storm to be in business. π€
Man this is super bleak for the Salt/Gila basin in AZ/NM and the Colorado River in general. And not looking great for the State Water Project in California with those numbers on the northern Sierra.
Every descent is a first descent.
For me itβs just a different kind of feeling. The future is wide open: endless horizons. Every time you stand at the top of a mountain, itβs the first time youβve been there as the person you are on that day, in that weather, with that sun & snow, that mountain mood. How can you compare trips?
Competition is part of human nature and I suppose itβs inevitable for popular physical activities to go this way. The social media era has of course brought a lot of self-imposed individual competition like trying to complete some list of backcountry lines, trying for speed records, etc.
The people competing in this event are incredible athletes and itβs obviously a passion for them. For me itβs weird for ski mountaineering to be a competitive sport bc one of the things I like best about it is the lack of competitive pressure. www.latimes.com/sports/olymp...
On the plus side no one here paid Park City prices for these conditions. www.instagram.com/reel/DUQoLpZ...
Connective sunny day thunderstorms over the San Gabriels? in February?? Sure why not. Right on brand for this winter.
Ugh finally get that damnable ridge off California