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RegisterApr 2nd, 2017–Apr 3rd, 2017
Olympics.
Avoid steep sun exposed terrain if you see wet snow deeper than a few inches and initial rollerballs or small loose wet avalanches that can indicate an increasing loose wet avalanche danger. Avoid travel on or below cornices.
Light winds and sunny weather should be seen on Monday with moderately warmer temperatures.
Sunshine will melt and possibly cause loose wet snow avalanches on steep solar slopes. Avoid steep sun exposed terrain if you see wet snow deeper than a few inches and initial rollerballs or small loose wet avalanches that can indicate an increasing loose wet avalanche danger.
Recent cornices are very large. Natural cornice releases and resulting slab avalanches are dangerous and unpredictable. Give cornices a wide berth if traveling along ridge-lines and avoid slopes below large cornices. See a blog post regarding cornices here.
Past wind slabs should have mostly stabilized where formed on lee slopes and will not be listed as an avalanche problem for Hurricane.
Weather and Snowpack
Several inches of rain fell in the Olympics and Cascades on Friday, 3/17 to Saturday 3/18. Rapid cooling following the event formed a very strong crust layer, now buried by snowfall in late March.
The dominant wind pattern for the last several frontal systems at Hurricane have been moderate sustained S-SE winds. This transported snow to build fresh wind slabs in the Hurricane Ridge area.
Daily early spring warming temperatures in late March have allowed surface snow melt and consolidation at Hurricane at nearly the same rate as snow accumulations which should generally indicate strong surface layers.
A weak front crossed the Northwest on Saturday morning causing light rain. This was followed by an upper trough on that caused some light amounts of snow. In most areas this will have refrozen upper layers of the snowpack.
Recent Observations
No recent observations.