Summary
Confidence
Moderate - Timing or intensity of solar radiation is uncertain
Weather Forecast
Monday night: Mainly clear. Light northeast winds. Tuesday: Sunny. Light northwest winds. Alpine high temperatures around -1 with a increasing alpine temperature inversion establishing an above freezing layer at 2000 metres by evening.Wednesday: Sunny. Light northeast winds. Alpine high temperatures around -1 under a continuing alpine temperature inversion with an above freezing layer at 2000 metres.Thursday: Sunny with cloudy periods. Light variable winds. Alpine high temperatures around -1 with a lingering alpine temperature inversion and above freezing layer at 2000 metres.
Avalanche Summary
No new avalanches were reported over the weekend.Explosives control work in the Whistler area on Friday produced several size 1.5 cornice releases and one 20 cm deep size 1.5 storm slab. On Wednesday cornices were touchy; a size 1.5 cornice failure was initiated with a very light load. Control work produced storm slabs that averaged size 1.5 on a variety of aspects in the alpine. The outlier was a size 3 avalanche induced by control work on a north facing alpine feature which stepped down to the early November crust.Please submit any observations you have to the Mountain Information Network here,
Snowpack Summary
Days of cool, clear weather have grown a widespread new layer of feathery surface hoar crystals on the snow surface. Below the surface, the same cold has been transforming the storm snow from last week into a layer of faceted (sugary) snow. This layer of faceting storm snow increases in depth from about 20 cm at 1800-2000 metres, where it sits above a strong rain crust, to upwards of 30-40 cm in the alpine above 2000 metres, where the crust is not present. Here, the storm snow shows good signs of bonding well to the now well-settled mid snowpack.Above 2000 m, about 50-150 cm of snow now sits on the early November melt-freeze crust. This crust may be layered with weak faceted crystals in places where it lies close to the ground. This is most likely to cause problems in glaciated terrain or on smoother, high elevation slopes where the summer snow did not melt out.
Problems
Loose Wet
Aspects: South East, South, South West, West.
Elevations: Alpine.
Likelihood
Expected Size
Cornices
Aspects: North, North East, North West.
Elevations: Alpine.
Likelihood
Expected Size
Valid until: Dec 4th, 2018 2:00PM