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RegisterFeb 26th, 2023–Feb 27th, 2023
Banff Yoho Kootenay, Little Yoho, Banff, East Side 93N, Kootenay, Lake Louise, LLSA, Sunshine, West Side 93N, Field.
The winds have begun to decrease, but the extent of the windslab development at upper elevations is widespread. Reports over the weekend have shown that this problem is reactive to human triggering.
The field team Monday observed active loading at upper elevations, with sloughing and audible avalanches out of extreme terrain. Local ski hills reported reverse loading with small reactive windslabs at ridge crest.
Saturday, several human-triggered avalanches to size 2.5 were reported in the forecast region.
10-15cm of new snow overlays a faceting upper snowpack. Moderate to Strong W winds continue to form windslabs at alpine and treeline elevations. These windslabs overlie the various Jan PWL interfaces of sun crusts, facets and surface hoar down 70-110 cm. The weaker Nov 16 basal facet layer is down 100-180 cm and still produces mod-hard sudden collapse test results. Deeper snowpack areas west of the divide have a stronger and more supportive lower snowpack than areas to the east.
Partly cloudy conditions with light precip are expected Monday. Winds will gradually decrease through the day with peak values of moderate from the West in the morning. Daytime high temperatures will be near 0 degrees near valley bottom. By late Monday into Tuesday, increased flurries are expected with a few centimeters of accumulation.