December 24, 2017 SS-ASu-D2-R2-I #avalanche at #HatcherPass today NW of the Pinnacle at ~5400’ S aspect. Upper crown up to ~4’ thick. Triggered two more pockets of thick wind slab as it descended. Path ~500’ total. 1F- wind packed (slab) on thin layer of facets (weak layer) overlying decomposing melt-freeze crust (bed surface). Third photo shows the upper skier triggered pocket and the other two pockets subsequently triggered. The skiers were traversing and ascending just below the rock band left of the upper wind slab pocket. The first skier made switchbacks along the upper lip of the wind slab pocket without incident. It released as the second skier ascended at his feet at the apex of the wind lip. Both skiers are OK (neither caught or carried). #Talkeetna #Mountains #Alaska #skiing A post shared by Anchorage Avalanche Center (@anchorage_avalanche_center) on Dec 24, 2017 at 6:34pm PST Another look at the #ExtremeSkinner human triggered avalanche SS-ASu-D2-R2-I #avalanche at #HatcherPass Sunday 12/24 NW of the Pinnacle at ~5400’ S aspect. Upper crown up to ~4’ thick. Triggered two more pockets of thick wind slab as it descended. Path ~500’ total. 1F- wind packed (slab) on thin layer of facets (weak layer) overlying decomposing melt-freeze crust (bed surface). The first skier made switchbacks along the upper lip of the wind slab pocket without incident. It released as the second skier ascended at his feet at the apex of the wind lip. Both skiers are OK (neither caught or carried). #Talkeetna #Mountains #Alaska #skiing A post shared by Anchorage Avalanche Center (@anchorage_avalanche_center) on Dec 27, 2017 at 8:10pm PST