Mid-slope clouds are often observed on valley sidewalls in mountainous regions, especially under moist conditions. These clouds can be produced by thermally forced flows that move upslope with daytime heating or by dynamical forcing if there is a cross-valley component to the flow that leads to upslope on one sidewall.
Today I spent the morning skiing through a pesky mid-slope cloud at Patscherkofel, a ski area just to the south of Innsbruck.
Patscherkofel is in many ways a cursed ski area. It is surrounded by higher mountains, and thus is in a snow hole. It is also at the mouth of the Wipp Valley, which descends from Brenner Pass, the lowest pass in the eastern Alps. As a result, the Patscherkofel often experiences strong or even severe downslope winds, referred to as Foehn in the Alps.
| Foehn flow. Source: Secrets of the Greatest Snow on Earth |
That said, Patscherkofel has a number of things going for it when there isn't Foehn. First, it is easy to access from Innsbruck. Get on the J-bus with a pair of skis or a snowboard and you have a free ride right to the base of the Patscherkofel. During the week, these busses run every 10 minutes. No need to check the timetable.
Second, the Patscherkofel has substantial vertical by American standards with a drop of 956 meters or 3136 feet, more than the Snowbird Tram. And it's one ride to the top in a modern 10-passenger gondola.
Third, it was the site of the 1976 Olympic Downhill, so you can retrace the route that Franz Klammer followed on his way to his famous gold medal.
Finally, compared to many Alpine ski areas, there are actually some trees. Mind you, it is still not the easiest place to ski in cloud, but it is better than most Alpine resorts, which is why I was there today as the options for bluebird skiing were low in Tirol (although if I was up for it I could have taken the train to Italy where it was sunny). Plus they got some snow this week so it wasn't boilerplate from top to bottom.
The mid-morning view from the top of the gondola tells the story. The top of the gondola was trapped in the cloud sandwich between altostratus clouds (mid-level layered clouds) and the pesky mid-slope clouds. The photo below is taken looking toward the northwest and the mid-slope clouds were moving from right to left, wrapping around the Patscherkofel mid slope as they moved from the Inn Valley toward the lower Wipp Valley.
The light wasn't too bad when you were above these clouds, but at times it was lights out when you descended into them. Look carefully for the skier at center right.
The Department of Atmospheric and Cryospheric Sciences here has a wind lidar, which is an instrument that uses pulses of laser light reflected off of tiny particles in the atmosphere to measure the wind speed and direction. Using this instrument, they produce time-height sections of the flow over Innsbruck. Below is the time-height section for a roughly 25-hour period that includes my ski this morning (between the blue lines). I've highlighted the Patcherkofel base and the top of the gondola. During my ski, there was flow from the ENE (I've highlightd this with a red arrow) at mid-mountain level. This is close to an up-valley flow in the Inn Valley. Under quiescent conditions, the flow in the Inn Valley in the morning is usually westernly (down valley), so this was a dynamically driven flow. However, the small northerly component was probably enough to produce a little cross-valley upslope flow and cloud given the moist conditions.
| Source: University of Innsbruck |
After bussing back to Innsbruck, I got a good view of the mid-slope cloud from by our apartment. In the photo below, the top of the Patscherkofel gondola is circled and a bit below the true mountain summit. The base is blocked by the lower ridge but I've drawn a blue arrow to indicate it's approximate location (you can see some of the trails to the right of this arrow). The mid-slope cloud is apparent between summit and base and I've highlighted the flow with red arrows.
I was hoping for a sunny day as this is my only possible ski day this week, but turns were had, few people were out, and interesting meteorology was observed.