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RegisterJan 28th, 2021–Jan 29th, 2021
South Coast Inland.
Triggering avalanches remains possible in wind loaded areas and in steep terrain where sluffing may occur.
Small avalanches can have big consequences if they are triggered above features like cliffs or terrain traps.
THURSDAY NIGHT - Mainly cloudy / light southwest wind / alpine low temperature near -9
FRIDAY - Mainly cloudy with isolated flurries, 5-10 cm possible in the overnight period / light to moderate southwest wind / alpine high temperature near -8
SATURDAY - Flurries, 5 cm, with another 5-10 cm overnight / moderate to strong south wind / alpine high temperature near -6
SUNDAY - Flurries, 5-10 cm, with another 5-10 cm overnight / strong south wind / alpine high temperature near -5
It may be possible to trigger small pockets of wind slab at higher elevations. Steep terrain features with no slab may sluff when ridden.
On Tuesday there were a few reports of explosives triggered size 1.5-2 avalanches.
There were a few reports of natural and human triggered dry loose avalanches on Monday.
5-15 cm of recent fresh snow sits on firm wind affected snow at upper elevations, on surface hoar in some sheltered areas, on a melt-freeze crust below 1600 m, and on a sun crust on south-facing slopes. Recent southeast winds may have redistributed some of this new snow, creating wind slabs in leeward terrain.
In the south, the underlying snowpack is well consolidated. In the north, a melt-freeze crust from early December may be found 100 to 200 cm deep. Recent reports suggest that this layer is gaining strength and has been unreactive in recent weeks.