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RegisterJan 17th, 2020–Jan 18th, 2020
Northwest Inland.
Low elevation trees are your best chance at avoiding windslabs and finding soft snow and reasonable temperatures on Saturday.
Friday night: Increasing cloud with flurries starting, trace accumulations. Wind building to strong south to southeast. Alpine temperatures around -25 C.
Saturday: Mostly cloudy with flurries bringing 5-10 cm of new snow. Strong southeast to southwest winds. Alpine high around -18 C.
Sunday: Mix of sun and cloud with isolated flurries bringing up to 5 cm of new snow. Moderate south to southwest winds, strong at ridgetop. Alpine high around -15 C.
Monday: Mix of sun and cloud with isolated flurries bringing up to 5 cm of new snow. Light to moderate southeast winds.. Alpine high around -10 C.
On Wednesday and Thursday, we received reports of skier triggered windslab avalanches size 1.5-2.5 around treeline. Crown depths were up to 1 m, and they ran on a surface hoar layer buried by the previous storm on January 10th.
Reports from the Bulkley Valley Monday detail natural windslab and persistent slab avalanche activity, size 2.5-3 on aspects lee to previous strong outflow winds. The persistent slab avalanches are suspected to be isolated incidents of avalanches running on the deep November crust.
Extensive wind affect at all elevations. Southerly winds are forming fresh windslabs from new snow in places that were previously scoured by northeasterly arctic outflows.
Around treeline, the old windslabs may overly a layer of surface hoar, up to 1 m deep. This means they may remain sensitive to human triggering and resulting avalanches could be surprisingly large. Deeper in the snowpack, another couple of surface hoar layers are currently buried about 80-120 cm below the surface in sheltered areas around treeline. There have been no reports of avalanche activity associated with them for a few weeks, during which several storm slab avalanche cycles have tested their potential for step-downs.
A deep crust from mid November lurks at the base of the snowpack. A couple of recent large avalanches are suspected to have run on this layer in isolated incidents on lee and cross-loaded features high in the alpine.