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RegisterNov 27th, 2019–Nov 28th, 2019
Sea To Sky.
Clear and cold conditions into the weekend. What snow exists is limited to the alpine elevation band where depths are highly variable due to recent strong winds.
WEDNESDAY Night: Clear skies, moderate to strong northeast wind, alpine temperature -12 C.
THURSDAY: Clear skies, light northeast wind, alpine temperature -12 C.
FRIDAY: Clear skies, light northeast wind, alpine temperature -8 C.
SATURDAY: Mix of sun and cloud, Light east wind, Alpine temperature -5 C.
Observations are very limited right now, with recreationists just starting to get into the mountains and operations starting up. We haven't received any reports of recent avalanche activity. The most likely place to trigger an avalanche would be where the ground is smooth, such as on glaciers, rock slabs, scree slopes, or grassy slopes.
If you see anything while out in the field, please consider sharing that information with us and fellow recreationists via the Mountain Information Network (MIN).
Strong wind from the northeast may redistribute snow in the alpine, stripping snow from previously wind-loaded northerly features and now loading south to west terrain features. This snow covers a variety of surfaces, from bare ground below treeline, around 50 cm of snow intermixed with trees and rocks at treeline and lower alpine elevations, and upwards of 100 cm of snow above 2000 m.
The new snow may not bond well to an underlying hard melt-freeze crust. Use particular caution where the snow surface appears smooth, as this may mean an avalanche could propagate over a wider area.