Avalanche Forecast
Issued: Apr 23rd, 2014 8:38AM
The alpine rating is Wind Slabs.
, the treeline rating is , and the below treeline rating is Known problems includeSummary
Confidence
Fair - Due to the quality of field observations
Weather Forecast
Synopsis:Â Unsettled weather will persist throughout the forecast period .Tonight and Thursday: Sunny with cloudy periods and chances of flurries / Light southerly winds / Freezing levels 2000mFriday: Flurries / light southeasterly winds / Freezing levels 2000mSaturday: Flurries / Light southwesterly winds / Freezing levels 2000m
Avalanche Summary
Small slabs have been recently triggered naturally and by skiers in areas where the upper snow is moist and sits above a crust. At lower elevations and on solar aspects small to large loose wet avalanche continue to be triggered on steep slopes. Cornices collapses have been reported during periods of daytime warming. Occasionally these heavy triggers have caused large deep slab avalanches on the slopes below.
Snowpack Summary
A fresh crust on all but high elevation North aspects is now buried by up to 15cm of new snow. Below this 20 to 40cm of snow overlies older melt-freeze crusts from earlier in the month. Wind slabs can be found in lee features on N and E aspects in the Alpine.Several persistent weak layers exist in the highly variable snowpack of the South Columbia region:- The mid-March sun crust/surface hoar layer down 50-80cm and the early-March crust/facet/surface hoar layer down around 80-120cm seem to be inactive.- The mid-February crust/facet/surface hoar combo is typically down 150 - 200cm. Human triggered avalanches on this layer are unlikely. Larger triggers such as cornice fall, a smaller avalanche in motion or prolonged warming could wake this layer up, resulting in very large and destructive avalanche.
Problems
Wind Slabs
Aspects: North, North East, East, South East.
Elevations: Alpine, Treeline.
Likelihood
Expected Size
Valid until: Apr 24th, 2014 2:00PM