Avalanche Forecast

Issued: Mar 2nd, 2025 1:30PM

The alpine rating is considerable, the treeline rating is considerable, and the below treeline rating is moderate. Known problems include Persistent Slabs and Deep Persistent Slabs.

Avalanche Canada Parks Canada, Avalanche Canada

The snowpack will be tested once again with incoming snow, rain, winds and fluctuating freezing levels.

Summary

Confidence

Low

Avalanche Summary

Today's warmer weather triggered additional new persistent slab avalanche activity up to size 2, along with numerous wet loose avalanches to size 2. Neighboring operations continue to report natural size 2-3 persistent slab activity.

As temperatures begin to cool, incoming snow or potential rain will add new load, further destabilizing the snowpack. Avalanche conditions still remain serious, even if not immediately obvious.

Snowpack Summary

Freezing levels rose to 3000m again on Sunday, creating moist surface snow. Expect crust formation, especially on solar aspects, with the overnight refreeze.

Moderate to strong winds have redistributed last week’s snow, loading leeward features while stripping alpine and exposed treeline areas.

The top 10-30cm sits over weak February facets atop old wind slabs, crusts, or depth hoar. Below 1800m, warmth has saturated the weak snowpack.

Weather Summary

Sunday evening will bring cloudy skies with some 5-10cm of new snow. Alpine temperatures will reach a low of -6 °C with light winds. Freezing level at valley bottom.

Monday could see an additional 2-4cm. Freezing levels will eventually descend throughout the day to 1600m.

Only slightly cooler temperatures are expected for the rest of the week with light winds and fairly clear skies.

Terrain and Travel Advice

  • Loose avalanches may step down to deeper layers, resulting in larger avalanches.
  • Fresh snow rests on a problematic persistent slab, don't let good riding lure you into complacency.

Problems

Persistent Slabs

An icon showing Persistent Slabs

Recently redistributed snow is sitting on top of a layer of weak facets from the February drought, which rests on old wind slabs, crusts, or depth hoar. Even with cooling temperatures, new snow or rain will put this weak layer under more stress. Human triggering will remain likely.

Aspects: All aspects.

Elevations: Alpine, Treeline.

Likelihood

Likely

Expected Size

1.5 - 3

Deep Persistent Slabs

An icon showing Deep Persistent Slabs

Recent avalanche activity on this layer was reported by the local ski hill in the surrounding backcountry on Friday. The large depth hoar at the base of the snowpack remains inherently weak. While cooler temperatures may slow things down, the incoming snow or rain could reactivate this problem.

Aspects: All aspects.

Elevations: All elevations.

Likelihood

Unlikely - Possible

Expected Size

1.5 - 3

Valid until: Mar 2nd, 2025 4:00PM

Login