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RegisterMar 10th, 2019–Mar 11th, 2019
Stevens Pass.
Expect increasing clouds, warming temperatures, and wind at upper elevations. You can trigger loose avalanches on steep slopes (both sunny and shaded) where you find soft, weak snow on the surface. Don't linger on steep sunny slopes as temperatures warm and use caution near cliffs and gullies, where small avalanches could be dangerous.
Today's avalanches will be small, predictable, point releases. West wind could be strong enough to drift snow at the highest elevations. There's not much snow available to move, but keep an eye out for any fresh slabs. On Saturday and Sunday, observers reported a handful of small, loose wet avalanches on the southeast face of Lichtenberg Mountain. Observers reported small loose dry avalanches on steep sheltered slopes near Mt. Howard on Friday.
Observers have reported weak facets and surface hoar on most slopes, including over crusts on sun-exposed slopes. Up to 7 inches of snow accumulated late last week with west wind. On many slopes the recent snow is facetting quickly and blending with underlying faceted layers. In places where the wind drifted shallow slabs, there could be underlying weak snow.
Feather-like surface hoar blanketed a southeast aspect at 5,300ft on Tye Peak. 3/10/2019. Photo: Josh Hirshberg
March 10, 2019
February started stormy and cold with very active avalanche conditions on persistent weak layers. The month finished with continued cold temperatures but drier weather allowed avalanche activity to taper off. Persistent weak layers that were buried early in the month (Feb 8th) are now unreactive, though you can still find the grains.
Aside from the series of storms in early to mid-February, most regions have measured relatively light snow accumulation in the past 3 weeks. Snow has stayed soft especially on shaded slopes and faceting and surface hoar have been plentiful. While there has been plenty of sunshine since mid-February, very cold temperatures have kept melt-freeze crust to a minimum on sunny slopes.
A natural loose wet avalanche (D1.5) on a southeast aspect of Lichtenberg Mtn at 5,400ft. 3/10/2019. Photo: Josh Hirshberg
Recent Avalanches
Our attention shifted to the upper snowpack. Recent avalanche problems have largely focussed on wind transported snow and weak snow surfaces on both dry, shaded slopes and sun-exposed aspects. In some locations, a weak layer of surface hoar and facets was buried on March 6th. We’ll keep an eye on this interface as we move into the future.
A skier-triggered storm slab avalanche (D1.5) on Shuksan Arm, north aspect, 5200ft. 03/09/19 Adam U Photo.
Moving Forward
As we move further into March, there are two points to consider:
The strength of the March sun: As the sun creeps higher into the sky and the days grow longer, the sun can have a greater impact on the snow surface. When the sun comes out, expect things to change quickly. You may see avalanches conditions change with natural loose avalanches originating from sunny slopes, surface snow becoming thick and heavy, and slabs taking on a moist to wet snow character.
Weak surfaces: facets and surface hoar have blanketed snow surfaces in many zones. Any significant snowfall will bury well-developed and widespread persistent weak layers. Recently, most storms have not delivered enough precipitation to cause a problem.