Avalanche Forecast
Issued: Mar 18th, 2019 4:11PM
The alpine rating is Loose Wet and Persistent Slabs.
, the treeline rating is , and the below treeline rating is Known problems includeSummary
Confidence
High -
Weather Forecast
Monday night: Clear. Light northeast winds. Freezing levels rising to 2800 metres.Tuesday: Sunny. Light variable winds. Alpine high temperatures around +7 with freezing levels rising to 3100 metres and remaining elevated overnight.Wednesday: Sunny. Light southeast winds. Alpine high temperatures around +9 with freezing levels around 3200 metres, dropping slightly overnight.Thursday: Sunny. Light southwest winds. Aline high temperatures around +7 with freezing levels around 3000 metres, dropping slightly overnight.
Avalanche Summary
Reports from Sunday showed a continuation of natural loose wet avalanche activity focused on sun exposed aspects, with some releases reaching size 2.5 as they gouged into the snowpack to entrain more mass.Saturday's reports are of significant warming but only small loose wet avalanches. Neighbouring regions (for example Kananaskis Country) where the snowpack is thinner and weaker entered a natural avalanche cycle involving most aspects, most elevations, and most snowpack layers.On Thursday, a group of riders remotely triggered a size 1.5 persistent slab from 100 metres away. See the MIN report for more details. This is an important piece of data when considering the effect of forecast strong sunshine and warming on persistent slab problems that developed earlier in the season.Looking forward, the type of activity shown above can be expected to continue, expand to all aspects, and perhaps intensify as temperatures remain elevated and overnight cooling remains weak.
Snowpack Summary
Upper snowpack: Getting warm and moist during the day, maybe forming ephemeral crusts overnight. On sunny aspects there may be buried crusts serving as sliding layers. On lee slopes there may be buried hard layers of wind effected snow (buried wind slabs). There might even be some good old soft snow (powder hiding out on high elevation shadier places). Mid pack: The mid-snowpack consists of sugary faceted grains (facets) of different hardness. Two older layers of surface hoar still exist down 55-80 and down 95-150 around 1600-1900m. See Avalanche Activity section below for why this is relevant!Lower pack: Was reportedly strong in deep snowpack regions, but I have doubts in shallower areas where the long February cold weakened even the deep layers. Now add a bunch of heat and sun ... the snowpack won't be feelin' the love. Forecasting how many sunny days and warm nights it's going to take to wake up deeper layers is tough; however, I can say with confidence it's a good time to stand aside, watch from afar, let the mountains shed their coat, and come back to the game when things return to normal after the temperatures cool.
Problems
Loose Wet
Aspects: All aspects.
Elevations: All elevations.
Likelihood
Expected Size
Persistent Slabs
Aspects: All aspects.
Elevations: All elevations.
Likelihood
Expected Size
Valid until: Mar 19th, 2019 2:00PM