That site says to "not leave home without your slope meter" because "Most slab avalanches occur on slopes with starting zone angles between about 30 and 45 degrees, but slabs occasionally occur on slopes less than 30 degrees."
What sorts of techniques do those of you who like to hike slide, bowls, ravines or other open trails use to estimate the slope of the trail - or do you even bother?
the gullies in tuckerman like right, lobster claw, etc.. typically are 30 to 40 degrees. something like N Tri slide, I am guessing would be the 25 degree range. Gulies are thr garbage dumps of mountains... everything comes down them - snow, ice, rocks, etc..
Trails, I would look out for sliding in the whites on a day like today (not a complete list, cuz I have not been on every trail
)
- anything up a ravine, tucks, hunts, king, oaks, castle, gulf of slides, great gulf, etc...
- any of the slides.
- east snowfeilds on wash
- there is a spot on the gulfside trail that crosses the upper large gully (not really sure I would call it a gully) of jefferson ravine. That appears to be in the 25 degree range and after big snow, a hiker crossing and unstable snow pack could send that to slide.
having witnesses hillmans highway slide 2 years ago at a very up close range (too close) - skimom remember that??????, I now take east coast avy's very seriously.
sometime in the early 2000's - a slide out of huntington ravine took the first aid catch for something like a 1/4 of a mile down the lower ravine. I remember hiking by it after - saying WOW.
just a FYI sicne I had 10 minutes before my next meeting at work