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RegisterApr 11th, 2017–Apr 12th, 2017
Mt Hood.
Watch for fresh wind slabs on lee slopes in steep terrain mainly above treeline. Sun breaks can quickly create loose wet avalanche conditions on steep slopes facing the sun. Give cornices a wide safety margin.
An approaching front will move across the Mt Hood area Tuesday night and early Wednesday with SE-SW winds.
Light to moderate snow and strong winds will likely build fresh wind slabs on lee slopes below ridges, near and especially above treeline by Wednesday.
Watch for new wind slabs, mainly on NW-SE slopes above treeline. Keep an eye out for firmer wind transported snow that is a sign of wind slab.
Strong winds and new snow will continue to build and grow recent large cornices. There have been numerous recent cornice failures with some being very large in the WA Cascades.
Recent cornices are very large and resulting slab avalanches are dangerous and unpredictable. Five people were tragically killed by a cornice release in BC on Saturday. Give cornices a wide berth if traveling along ridge-lines and avoid slopes below large cornices. See a blog post regarding cornices here.
Weather and Snowpack
Heavy rain in mid March has left behind a well consolidated old snowpack with one or more strong melt freeze crusts in the upper snowpack.
A series of strong spring storms was seen last week that affected mainly the Washington Cascades. At Mt Hood snow levels were generally between 6500-7500 feet on Wednesday, lowering to about 550-6500 feet on Thursday. For the 3 days ending Friday morning NWAC stations at Mt Hood had about .8 inches of WE which will have fallen as snow above the snow levels.
A low pressure system moved north along the coast on Friday. About 4 inches of snow were seen at NWAC stations at Mt Hood. Very strong winds built large wind slabs and fresh cornices during sustained SE-SW winds averaging over 35 mph with gusts over 80 mph! These winds were so strong that wind slabs were less widespread and formed lower on leeward slopes than typical.
A calmer, cooler pattern was seen Saturday and Sunday with about 4-5 inches of snow each day at NWAC stations at Mt Hood. A period of fair weather and sunshine or filtered sun Sunday allowed for more consolidation and some surface snow melt on all but steep shaded slopes in higher terrain.
A front and upper trough crossed the Northwest on Sunday night, depositing another another 4-6 inches of storm snow at Mt Hood stations by Monday morning. Moderate winds built fresh wind slabs above treeline on steep lee terrain features.
Sunny weather Tuesday helped storm snow begin to settle, however, winds remained strong enough above treeline Tuesday to continue to transport surface snow, maintaining areas of wind slabs.
Recent Observations
On Saturday and Sunday, the Mt Hood Meadows patrol reported that fresh wind slabs were stubborn and isolated. No ski cut avalanches were released. There were about 6-12 inches of new storm snow at the 6600 foot elevation. The strong winds built some hard slab conditions on lee slopes above treeline, ranging from 1-3 feet. These hard slabs were not likely to be released by human trigger.
The Mt Hood Meadows patrol on Monday reported new small sensitive wind slab on the NE slopes above 6000 feet with large wind slab expected at higher elevations. Sensitive loose wet avalanches were also seen below tree line.
Updates from the Meadows crew Tuesday indicated there were fresh wind slabs above treeline on isolated features, mainly N-NE facing terrain. These were hard slabs ranging from 4-12 inches and stubborn, but released with both ski and explosive triggers, size D2.