Avalanche Forecast
Regions: Olympics.
We expect minimal avalanche hazard on Monday due to cloud cover limiting surface melt and a generally strong snowpack. If you find an area with a poor overnight refreeze or punchy snow, either adjust your aspect or reduce your slope angle to prevent a wet avalanche. Take normal springtime precautions around drooping cornices, opening creeks, and widening glide cracks.
Discussion
Snow and Avalanche Discussion
Melt-freeze surfaces dominate the Olympic mountains. The Olympics will be near the northern edge of a large cloud shield on Monday with uncertainty in the northward extent of the cloud cover. You should be prepared for typical springtime challenges on Monday: Firm or icy surfaces may be slick until sunshine or mild temperatures helps them to soften, but increasing cloud-cover may prevent them from softening the entire day. If high clouds move over the region Sunday night, expect a weaker refreeze and weak overnight crust development, particularly below treeline. A weak freeze forms a weak crust. When diurnal heating softens the crust, the result is punchy wet snow and the potential for small loose wet avalanches which can release naturally or as you travel. If you find these conditions, move to slope angles less than 35 degrees and adjust your aspect away from the sun. Constantly monitor the snow surface conditions as you travel to prevent surprises.
Temperatures Friday and Saturday nights stayed above freezing at Hurricane Ridge, but clear skies and radiational cooling formed solid crusts Saturday and Sunday mornings.
Friday through Sunday, NPS personnel reported snow surfaces softening (up to 2â) and supportable corn snow conditions. No significant loose wet avalanche activity was reported from Hurricane Ridge.
On Thursday, NWAC and NPS personnel found firm snow surfaces softening and no avalanche concerns of note. Be aware that the snowpack is quickly thinning on sunny aspects below about 4500-5000', so take care and watch for barely hidden rocks and trees at lower elevations. Â
The mountains are still experiencing their spring transition. Creeks are opening up with snow bridges collapsing. Glide cracks are evident and may release in generally predictable locations, but without warning. Sagging cornices may fail when stressed by the warmth of the sunshine or the weight of a person. You may find a wide variety of snow surfaces, including breakable crusts, firm icy surfaces, and wet heavy snow.
Glide crack opening up on the 20th of June slide path. Hurricane Ridge. 03/28/2019. Photo Credit: Robert Hahn.
Forecast schedule
For the 2018-19 winter season, avalanche danger ratings will be issued for the Olympics every Friday through Sunday and during mid-week holidays.
During the week, No Rating will be issued but forecasts will include expected conditions and relevant travel advice. While this avalanche forecast is focused on backcountry avalanche conditions expected in the Hurricane Ridge area, we want to hear about your observations from other parts of the Olympics as well.
Snowpack Discussion
March 29nd, 2019
Peak snowpack, spring strategy, and the scale of loose wet avalanches
Peak Snowpack
Now that March is winding down, let's take have a look at the snowpack on a seasonal scale. One good question to help put things into perspective is: Â âHave we hit peak snowpack depths?â This question is easily answered by, âIt dependsâ. Have we hit peak snowpack for lowland areas? Yes, that occurred in the last month at some point. Have we hit peak snowpack depths for mountain locations at around 6,000ft? Most likely, but that could still change. You can see in the graph below that we have a range in the date of peak snowpack depth by location. This is most likely due to a variation in storm tracks, and elevation differences. Â
Mount Baker, Heather Meadows (4,210ft): February 13 with 154â
Washington Pass, Base (5,450ft): February 13 with 76â
Stevens Pass, Schmidt Haus (3950ft): February 23 with 92â
Paradise at Mount Rainier National Park (5,400ft): Tied for February 20 and March 13 with 159â
Snowpack depth in inches over time from early December 2018 through March 29, 2019.
You can see that the last substantial winter storm to hit the state was in mid-March, since then weâve been on the general decline in snowpack depths. Initially, this timeframe started with very warm temperatures and strong sun for over a week. The snowpack began to warm up, and at lower elevations, it melted. This brought on a prolonged cycle of wet loose avalanching, with many slides gouging deep, into older snow. Since then, temperatures have moderated, and the melt has slowed, but not stopped. This early-spring interlude looks to continue for the short term, but April may bring a shift in the weather pattern.
Spring Strategy
With mostly stable weather and a mostly stable snowpack, many folks have shifted their backcountry travel strategy to what may be referred to as the âSpring Diurnal Mindsetâ. Check the link to the paper by Roger Atkins on the most excellent âStrategic Mindsetâ. During a Spring Diurnal mindset, professional ski guide operations typically check to make sure an adequate overnight refreeze has occurred. Once a slope thaws, avalanche terrain is avoided on that aspect, and the group shifts to a different aspect or calls it a day. This is because the trend of avalanche danger, along with other mountain hazards (such as cornice fall) during this type of pattern tends to fluctuate. At night, the sun drops below the horizon, the air temperatures cool, and the snowpack refreezes. In the morning, the sun rises and hits the slopes, and the crust that has been thickened over a period of similar days begins to melt and become weaker. Prime recreating on sun softened slopes can occur when you find that balance of melted snow on top, but still some frozen crust underneath. The âcorn harvestâ occurs when you have a supportable crust beneath this sun-softened snow. When that crust is fully melted, and the snowpack underneath contains wet, saturated snow, the snowpack becomes weak and potentially dangerous. Wet loose avalanches may be initiated, along with wet slabs if there are weak layers lingering in the pack. Â Â
The sunâs energy (shown here as Watts per meter squared) is much stronger than it was earlier in the season, as such, itâs influence on the snowpack is substantial. The increasing daily would trend look a bit more consistent if it were not for cloud cover. From the Paradise Wind Site at 5,380ft in Mount Rainier National Park.
The Scale of Loose Wet Avalanches
As mentioned, the initial pronounced warmup of the season changed our snowpack from a cold, dry, winter pack to a spring-like one. During this time (March 15-22) the mountains went through a prolonged period of wet loose avalanching. Many âgougingâ wet loose avalanches were observed. These got to be large and destructive on some big terrain features. Eventually, the temperatures cooled, and luckily, most of the damage was done.
Large, gouging wet loose avalanches ran in a large south facing gully near Mount Cashmere. March 20, 2019.
Chunky, old debris from a wet loose avalanche that gouged into older snow above Eightmile Lake. This slide ran over a 1,000ft vertical and broke some small trees. March 27, 2019.
Most recently, we have been experiencing a daily refreeze of the surface, which has put a freeze (get it? hahaha) on the wet loose cycle. With this thicker and more stout surface crust, anytime we receive more than a few inches of snowfall and it lands on top, it will be time to start thinking âwet loose avalancheâ all over again. The strong sun of spring wonât take long to begin changing the snow on the surface. These âsuperficialâ wet loose avalanches tend to be fairly predictable in nature, and direct evidence such as rollerballs, moist snow surfaces, and small loose wet slides alert us to reactive conditions.
With both flavors of wet loose avalanches (gouging wet loose, and superficial wet loose) the scale of the slope is important. The larger the slope, the larger these slides may become.
Small wet loose avalanches that ran on the recently buried crust, on a fairly small slope. March 26, 2019.
Wet loose slide from the same day. A larger slope allowed a larger avalanche to run, even though it ran on top of the same crust. March 26, 2019.
The High North
It is still winter on the high elevation, north facing slopes. Here, cold, dry snow can be found. In some areas above 6,000ft faceted snow may even be found on the surface. This is something to keep in mind when this lovely spring âinterludeâ breaks, and the storm track inevitably shifts back to our direction.
Â