Avalanche Forecast
Issued: Jan 6th, 2017 4:38PM
The alpine rating is Wind Slabs and Persistent Slabs.
, the treeline rating is , and the below treeline rating is Known problems includeSummary
Confidence
Moderate - Due to the number of field observations
Weather Forecast
We've had a bit of a shift from the very cold conditions, and temperatures have warmed by roughly 5 degrees Celcius. Only some isolated flurries are possible until late Sunday, when a small amount (5-10 cms) of light dry snow is forecast.SATURDAY: Sunny breaks with increasing clouds overnight. Flurries late in the day with little accumulation. Winds light southerly. Alpine highs to -13 Celcius.SUNDAY: Cloudy with flurries in the afternoon. Wind light southerly. Alpine temperatures between -12 and -16 Celcius; 5-10 cms light dry snow overnight.MONDAY: An additional 5-10 cms light dry snow are possible during the day. Winds light - moderate westerly. Alpine temperatures steady near -12 Celcius.
Avalanche Summary
Recent avalanche control work showed no signs of triggering slabs; however, don't let that give you a false sense of security.... normal caution is advised. Small, predictable skier-triggered avalanches (thin windslabs) were reported on Wednesday. Reports from earlier in the week were limited to a few Size 1-2 wind slab avalanches triggered naturally and by explosives. Wind slabs may remain reactive to human triggers in specific areas, such as the immediately lee of ridges and sun-exposed slopes.
Snowpack Summary
Surface hoar is growing and the upper snowpack is faceting. In exposed areas at all elevations, recent winds have resulted in scouring, hard wind slabs, and thicker reactive wind slabs in unusual places as the winds shifted from west to northeast. Continued moderate variable winds have been keeping wind-slabs fresh and touchy in some areas and sun-exposure is likely making the wind slabs extra touchy on south-facing slopes. Facets and/or surface hoar buried mid-December has been giving hard and broken or no results in snowpack tests where it is down close to a metre. However, recent snowpack tests in a shallower area, gave moderate sudden planar results on this persistent weakness where it was found as surface hoar down 20-30 cm. This suggests that the primary concern for persistent slab avalanches is in shallow snowpack areas; however, the potential for step-down avalanches remains where it is deeper. The lower snowpack is well bonded and features a thick rain crust near the ground.
Problems
Wind Slabs
Aspects: All aspects.
Elevations: Alpine, Treeline.
Likelihood
Expected Size
Persistent Slabs
Aspects: All aspects.
Elevations: All elevations.
Likelihood
Expected Size
Valid until: Jan 7th, 2017 2:00PM