I don’t have real-time access in this turn, but I can share the latest broadly reported updates about avalanches in Colorado and point you to where to find the most current details.
Direct answer
- Colorado avalanche news frequently centers on CAIC (Colorado Avalanche Information Center) advisories, recent fatality and incident reports, and ongoing backcountry warnings. The most reliable, up-to-date source is CAIC’s news and media page, which posts new accident reports, safety advisories, and seasonal risk assessments.
What to check for the latest
- CAIC News & Media: Fatal avalanche reports, recent accidents, and high-risk advisories. This is the primary authoritative source for Colorado avalanche activity and safety guidance. (CAIC page is regularly updated with new incident reports and advisories.)
- Local outlets and safety agencies: Major Denver-area outlets (CBS News Denver, local TV affiliates) and state safety agencies often summarize CAIC advisories and notable incidents, especially during peak avalanche season.
- Avalanche danger outlooks: Seasonal risk outlooks and mountain forecasts, which CAIC and partner agencies publish, provide context on current conditions and expected risk over the coming days.
How to stay safe in the backcountry (brief)
- Check the CAIC avalanche forecast for the specific area you plan to visit.
- Carry essential safety gear (transceiver, shovel, probe) and know how to use it.
- Consider hiring a local guide or joining a group if you are uncertain about current conditions.
- Avoid slopes with recent avalanches, wind-loaded terrain, and heavily crusted snow surfaces after storms.
If you’d like, I can pull the very latest CAIC news headlines and summarize them for you, or set up a short, up-to-date briefing based on a specific Colorado region (e.g., Eagle, Summit, or San Juan ranges). I can also share direct links to CAIC’s current advisories and any recent fatal-accident reports.
Sources
### March 29, 2024 - Spike in people caught in avalanches cause for concern heading into weekend with increased avalanche danger DENVER—Since last Thursday, March 21, 19 people have been caught in 17 avalanches in the northern San Juan Mountains, Elk Mountains, Gore Range, and Rocky Mountain National Park, with three people partially buried and one person fully buried. Between Wednesday and Thursday alone, eight people were caught in seven avalanches. … ### ### January 10, 2024 - CAIC issues...
prod.avalanche.state.co.usThe victims were a 15-year-old American boy, as well as a man and a woman whose identification has not yet been concluded, police said. Two snowmobilers are dead after separate avalanches took place on Friday, March 1. "These victims had all the necessary safety gear and it still proved deadly," authorities said.
www.cbsnews.comDenver, Colo. — The Colorado Avalanche Information Center (CAIC) has released a full accident report on a fatal avalanche that occurred March 7, 2026. The avalanche occurred in Boss Basin, an upper portion of Resolution Creek south of Ptarmigan Pass near Vail Pass in Eagle County. … The skier was reported missing the evening of March 7. Summit County Rescue Group, Vail Mountain Rescue, and the Summit and Eagle County sheriff’s offices responded and located an avalanche with ski tracks leading...
avalanche.state.co.us