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RegisterApr 11th, 2015–Apr 12th, 2015
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Keep your terrain selection conservative Sunday: Human triggered slides are likely on wind loaded aspects above tree-line, which also happens to be the elevation bands with solid snowcover. Shower intensity and sunbreaks will locally mix in loose wet and storm slab avalanche potential. Choose more moderate and less wind affected terrain and safely enjoy a taste of winter.
Showers should continue overnight Saturday, then end early Sunday with partial clearing expected. Freezing levels should remain low with moderate westerly ridgetop winds. This should continue to build some areas of shallow wind slab on lee slopes in the upper elevations as well as build cornices along ridges.
Even with the winter-like temperatures, mid-April sunbreaks in the late morning or mid-day can trigger loose wet avalanches involving the new storm snow on solar aspects.
Cornices won't be highlighted as an avalanche problem due to the cool weather, but use caution on slopes below cornices and on ridges where it can be hard to know if a large cornice is present.
Continued winter-like freezing levels and a frontal passage Friday night, followed by showers Saturday have deposited 2-6 inches of new snow as of Saturday afternoon. Moderate winds have likely transported new snow at higher elevations to build both wind slab and new cornices along ridges.
Reports via TAY and from NWAC observer Jeremy Allyn around Washington Pass last weekend indicate shallow powder over crusts on north slopes, corn snow and crusts on solar slopes and no signs of instability. Greater recent storm snow was being preserved west of Rainy Pass, where about 10 inches of unconsolidated powder was seen on shaded terrain at higher elevations, providing a bit of welcome powder skiing!
Snowdepths vary greatly across the east slopes with a regionally healthy snowpack in the northeast Cascades to bare solar and lower elevation slopes in the central and southeast Cascades. Many areas at lower elevations and further away from the Cascade crest do not have enough snow to cause an avalanche danger.