Avalanche Forecast

Issued: Feb 25th, 2025 4:00PM

The alpine rating is considerable, the treeline rating is considerable, and the below treeline rating is moderate. Known problems include Persistent Slabs and Wind Slabs.

Avalanche Canada Avalanche Canada, Avalanche Canada

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Our persistent weak layer is sensitive and will continue to be a concern with the warm weather. Dangerous avalanche conditions exist and rider-triggered avalanches are likely.

Summary

Confidence

Moderate

Avalanche Summary

Since Sunday, numerous large natural avalanches (size 2.5 to 3) were observed from steep northerly slopes at treeline and above. Several skiers-remote persistent slabs (size 1 to 2) were reported on the persistent layers down 40 to 50 cm deep while large triggers (vehicle and helicopter) remotely triggered large slabs (up to 100 cm crown). There are mentions of multiple sympathetic releases and recent step-down avalanches.

Snowpack Summary

The region received 20 to 30 cm of recent snow since Sunday, bringing the storm total to 50 to 60 cm. This is overlying various problematic surfaces including weak surface hoar or faceted grains in sheltered, shaded terrain, and sun crusts on sun-affected slopes. This layer was responsible for numerous and large remote triggers observed since Sunday throughout the region.

A layer of hard crust, buried in late January, is currently sitting beneath weak facets and less widespread surface hoar 40 to 80 cm deep. Some recent avalanches have failed on it, particularly closer to Whistler.

The snowpack below is strong.

Weather Summary

Tuesday Night

Mostly cloudy with isolated flurries. 15 to 25 km/h southwest ridgetop wind. Treeline temperature -3°C. Freezing level lowering from 1700 to 1000 m.

Wednesday

Mostly sunny. 30 to 40 km/h southwest ridgetop wind. Treeline temperature +2°C. Freezing level reaching 2200 m.

Thursday

Cloudy with isolated flurries. 40 to 50 km/h southwest ridgetop wind. Treeline temperature +2°C. Freezing level reaching 2000 m.

Friday

Mostly sunny. 15 to 25 km/h southwest ridgetop wind. Treeline temperature +2°C. Freezing level reaching 2200 m.

More details can be found in the Mountain Weather Forecast.

Terrain and Travel Advice

  • Be careful with wind-loaded pockets, especially near ridge crests and rollovers.
  • Be aware of the potential for large avalanches due to buried weak layers.
  • Avoid thin areas like rocky outcrops where you're most likely to trigger avalanches on deep weak layers.
  • Look for signs of instability: whumphing, hollow sounds, shooting cracks, and recent avalanches.

Problems

Persistent Slabs

An icon showing Persistent Slabs

Recent snow and wind have been working to consolidate reactive slabs over the mid-February weak layer and the late January crust below it. Shaded, wind-loaded areas at higher elevations are the most likely places to trigger this problem.

Aspects: North, North East, East, West, North West.

Elevations: Alpine, Treeline.

Likelihood

Likely

Expected Size

1 - 2.5

Wind Slabs

An icon showing Wind Slabs

Reactive wind slabs are easy to trigger by riders. Small wind slab releases may step down to weak layers in the upper snowpack to produce larger, more destructive avalanches.

Aspects: North, North East, East, South East, North West.

Elevations: Alpine, Treeline.

Likelihood

Possible - Likely

Expected Size

1 - 1.5

Valid until: Feb 26th, 2025 4:00PM

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