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RegisterApr 3rd, 2022–Apr 4th, 2022
South Columbia.
Snow amounts will vary highly throughout the region, with 10-30 cm. Storm slabs will build throughout the day and strong southwest wind will form fresh wind slabs. Choose conservative terrain if you see more than 15 cm new snow and wind is moving snow.
Sunday night: Cloudy, 5-15 cm snow, moderate to strong southwest wind, alpine low -4 °C, freezing level at 1500 m.
Monday: Cloudy, 5-15 cm snow, moderate to strong southwest wind, alpine high -4 °C, freezing level at 1500 m.
Tuesday: Mainly cloudy, 5-10 cm snow, moderate to strong westerly wind, alpine high -5 °C, freezing level at 1500 m.
Wednesday: Sunny, trace of new snow, light to moderate westerly wind, alpine high -3 °C, freezing level at 1700 m.
On Saturday, a few natural dry loose to size 2 and many small wet loose avalanches were reported on steep sun-exposed slopes. Skiers triggered many small storm/wind slabs and dry loose that ran on the recent crust about 10-20 cm deep, as well as a dry loose of size 2. And explosives triggered a small storm slab.
On Friday, small natural wet loose avalanches were observed. Skiers triggered small wind/storm slabs and wet loose avalanches, as well as a large (size 2) wind slab avalanche.
On Thursday, a few natural wind slabs up to size 2 were reported from the alpine on northeasterly slopes. Skier triggered dry loose avalanches and small storm slabs were easily triggered within the new storm snow up to size 1.5.
The snow surface became moist on sun-exposed slopes up to 2000 m in the last couple of days and formed a crust overnight.
The new snow will add to 10-50 cm recent snow that overlies a crust from late March. The amount of snow on the crust tapers rapidly at lower elevations. This crust is present on all aspects up to an elevation of 2600 m. Below the crust, the snow is moist.
The upper snowpack consists of multiple crusts that were formed in March and February.
The early-December rain crust is approximately a metre off the ground. Reports have recently indicated that large slab avalanches have failed on this interface earlier last week following a rain and warming event. This layer may be dormant now due to colder weather, however, it may appear again during the next big warm-up or with increased load from wind, snow, and/or rain.