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RegisterApr 8th, 2023–Apr 9th, 2023
Northwest Coastal, Kitimat, Nass, Rupert, Seven Sisters, Shames, Stewart, Howson, Ningunsaw.
As storm snow continues to build, step back into conservative terrain. Reactive storm slabs are forming at all elevations.
A weak layer buried late March came alive on Friday, head to low angle terrain free from overhead hazard to minimize your exposure.
On Friday numerous persistent slab avalanches were reported near Stewart on the March 31st buried weak layer. Natural, rider triggered and remote avalanches were triggered to size 2.5. Activity occurred on all aspects and elevations. A wind slab reported in this area on a northeast facing slope stepped down to this weak layer as well.
On Thursday operators reported loose wet activity at low elevations where temperatures remained warm. Natural and rider-triggered avalanche activity was reported within the recent storm snow, mostly to size 1, with larger results produced by explosive control methods in heavy snowfall areas.
Recent snowfall totals may reach 50 to 80 cm in coastal areas, and taper as you move inland where about 30-50 cm of snow has fallen over the week. This continues to be redistributed by southerly winds into wind slabs on north-facing slopes. This sits over wind-affected surfaces or a crust on south-facing slopes that extends into the alpine, or weak facetted crystals.
A weak layer buried at the end of March sits 50-80 cm deep in most areas (potentially over 1m deep in immediate coastal terrain). It includes facets and surface hoar in shaded areas, and a melt-freeze crust elsewhere. This layer has shown limited reactivity within the past week.
The mid and lower snowpack are considered generally strong and well-bonded. In far northern reaches of the region, basal facets may exist which are currently considered inactive. This layer may become active with abrupt changes to the snowpack, such as rapid loading (heavy snowfall or rain) or prolonged warming.
Friday Night
Mostly cloudy with 5-15 cm of snow. Moderate southerly winds. Freezing levels around 800 m.
Saturday
Cloudy with strong to extreme southerly winds. Snow intensifies with 15-40 cm possible. Higher amounts favor typical coastal terrain. Freezing levels around 1000 m.
Sunday
Cloudy with strong to extreme southerly winds. Another 15-30 cm of snow is possible. Freezing levels around 1000 m.
Monday
Cloudy, light snowfall with strong southerly winds. Freezing levels around 1000 m.
More details can be found in the Mountain Weather Forecast.