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RegisterMar 11th, 2025–Mar 12th, 2025
Jasper, Brazeau, Churchill, Cirrus-Wilson, Fryatt, Icefields, Maligne, Marmot, Miette Lake, Pyramid.
Be patient and give the snowpack time to heal for the next few days. Now is a good time to ski low angle terrain away from overhead hazards. Human-triggered avalanches are likely. Careful snowpack evaluation, cautious route-finding, and conservative decision-making is essential.
On Monday, observations on the Icefields Parkway corridor revealed widespread natural avalanche activity from during the storm. Large slab avalanches, up to size 3.5, consisted of a mix of storm slab and persistent slab, with occasional step-downs to deeper instabilities. Avalanche control using explosives triggered large storm and persistent slabs with wide propagation. Some avalanche debris reached as far as the road.Tuesday Maligne patrol saw no new avalanches
Up to 60 cm of new snow fell over the weekend. Below this fresh snow, the snowpack is complex, with multiple crusts and facet layers creating persistent weak layers. The bottom of the snowpack consists primarily of weak facets and depth hoar.
Wednesday
Flurries. Accumulation: 6 cm. Alpine temperature: High -4 °C. Ridge wind south: 15 km/h gusting to 40 km/h. Freezing level: 1800 metres.
Thursday:Snow accumulation: 6 cm. Alpine temperature: Low -10 °C, High -5 °C. Mostly light ridge wind occasionally gusting to 35 km/h. Freezing level: 1500 metres.