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RegisterApr 26th, 2023–Apr 27th, 2023
Yukon, Tutshi, Wheaton, White Pass East, White Pass West.
Travel cautiously and expect to find wind slabs in steep terrain. The possibility remains of triggering buried weak layers.
We haven't received any recent avalanche observations.
Going forward, we expect that riders could trigger wind slabs in steep terrain features. The likelihood of triggering a buried weak layer will increase when the freezing level rises on the weekend.
Avoiding cornice exposure is also a good idea, as they are very large and could fail naturally or under the weight of a human.
Wind slabs may be found in steep, lee terrain features from new snow and strong southerly wind. They may sit on a hard melt-freeze crust found up to 1400 m and to mountain tops on sun-exposed slopes. The snow surface could moisten on sun-exposed slopes during any period of sunny skies.
A weak layer of facets and potentially a melt-freeze crust from early January is buried over 100 cm deep in most areas.
Weak faceted grains may exist near the base of the snowpack, particularly in shallower snowpack areas.
Cornices are very large and loom over slopes below.
Relatively cool and snowy conditions are expected leading into the weekend, with 10 to 20 cm of snow possible along with strong southerly wind. Warm air is then incoming for Saturday, bringing the freezing level to around 2300 m.
More details can be found in the Mountain Weather Forecast.