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RegisterJan 11th, 2022–Jan 12th, 2022
Purcells.
Strong wind combined with new snow, warming temperatures and some sun require continuing assessment of rapidly changing snow conditions. The south of the region might see freezing levels rising to 2000 m on Wednesday afternoon.
Tuesday night: Mostly cloudy, 5-10 cm new snow, strong southwest wind, treeline low around -4 °C, freezing level around 800 m.
Wednesday: Mix of sun and cloud, up to 3 cm new snow, moderate to strong southwest wind, treeline high around 0 °C, freezing level around 1200 m, in the south of the region the freezing level will rise to 2000 m.
Thursday: Mix of sun and cloud, up to 3 cm new snow, moderate to strong southwest wind, treeline high around 0 °C, freezing level rising to 1400 m, in the south of the region freezing levels might stay around 2000 m.
Friday: Mix of sun and cloud, trace of new snow, light southwest wind, treeline high around -3 °C, freezing level around 1000 m.
On Monday, two cornices failed naturally and triggered a storm slab resulting in size 2 and 2.5 avalanches. The cornices did not step down to the early December persistent weak layer. Explosives triggered a small wind slab avalanche of size 1.5.
On Sunday, a natural size 2 wind slab avalanche that released in extremely steep terrain was observed. A few small (up to size 1.5) wind slab and dry loose avalanches were triggered by skiers.
On Saturday, several wind slab avalanches up to size 2 released naturally and were triggered by explosives. A small size 1.5 wind slab avalanche was triggered remotely by a skier.
On Friday, explosives triggered storm stab avalanches to size 2, on average 20 cm deep. A rider triggered a size 2 wind slab avalanche 30 cm deep. Skiers triggered numerous small (size 1) avalanches. A natural avalanche cycle to size 1.5 occurred Thursday-Friday night with rapid loading of new snow.
An increasing amount of large, persistent slab avalanches is being reported since Sunday. Almost all the reported avalanches over the past week ran on the early December weak layer. Deeply buried persistent problems like these don't go away overnight, and it remains a serious concern.
Notable persistent slab avalanches in neighbouring regions feature in our latest blog, Photos of recent persistent slab avalanches in the southern interior.
40-60 cm of recent storm snow fell with southwesterly wind and warming temperatures. In open terrain and upper elevations, wind developed more reactive deposits around lee and convex features. An accumulated total of 40-90 cm of new and recent snow sits now over variable and potentially weak snow surfaces including widespread facets, wind affected snow, and/or surface hoar up to 3 mm in sheltered areas.
The most notable layer of concern in the snowpack is a crust that was formed in early December and is now down 90-160 cm. Activity on this layer has been sporadic. It has generally been triggered on steep, rocky slopes, with a shallow or thin-to-thick snowpack. This layer has created a low likelihood, high consequence scenario which is best managed through conservative terrain choices and disciplined backcountry travel techniques.