Avalanche Forecast

Issued: Jan 1st, 2020 4:00PM

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

Avalanche Canada astclair, Avalanche Canada

Email

Avalanche hazard is not going to get much better before it gets a lot worse.

Summary

Confidence

Moderate - Uncertainty is due to the timing of the incoming weather system. Uncertainty is due to the fact that persistent slabs are particularly difficult to forecast.

Weather Forecast

Wednesday night: Cloudy, isolated flurries with 1-3 cm of snow, moderate northwest winds, alpine temperatures near -6 C with freezing levels dropping below 500 m.

Thursday: Cloudy, 5-10 cm of snow, moderate southwest winds, alpine high temperatures near -6 C.

Friday: Cloudy, above 1600 m 80-100 cm of snow possible overnight and throughout the day with heavy rain below, strong south winds, alpine high temperatures near 0 C with freezing levels rapidly rising to 1600 m.

Saturday: Cloudy, another 40-60 cm of snow possible overnight and during the day with freezing levels dropping to 800 m, moderate southwest winds, alpine high temperatures around -3 C.  

Avalanche Summary

Numerous large (size 2-2.5) natural, human-triggered, and explosive-triggered avalanches were reported Wednesday across aspects and elevations. Many of these avalanches failed at the storm interface and a few stepped down to the deeper November crust persistent weak layer. A couple of these avalanches were triggered by cornice fall.

The possibility for large human-triggered slab avalanches remains a serious concern for Thursday at higher elevations, especially as sensitive storm slabs create the potential for avalanches to step-down to these layers.

Snowpack Summary

The recent storm added a significant new load to our snowpack, creating a widespread storm slab problem. This problem is likely to be more pronounced at higher elevations where southwest winds have exacerbated the reactivity of the new snow in drifted areas. The new snow is falling on another recent layer of surface hoar that has been showing increasing reactivity as snow accumulates.

Buried deeper in the snowpack, there are multiple weak layers, which include a variable layer of surface hoar and crust from mid-December (down 70-90 cm) as well as a deeper layer of sugary facets and crust buried in late-November (down 120-200 cm). Both of these persistent weak layers produced many large and destructive avalanches during and in the days after the storm December 19-21. Snowpack tests continue to produce sudden and propagating results on these layers (like this MIN report from Disease Ridge on Sunday). This fundamentally unstable snowpack structure remains a serious concern as new snow and wind add a critical load and increase the likelihood of triggering large and destructive avalanches.

Terrain and Travel

  • Continue to make conservative terrain choices while the storm snow settles and stabilizes.
  • If triggered, storm slabs in-motion may step down to deeper layers and result in very large avalanches.

Problems

Storm Slabs

An icon showing Storm Slabs

Recent snow has created a widespread storm slab problem that has produced large avalanches from both natural and human triggers. Triggering a large slab avalanche Thursday remains possible at higher elevations, with wind-loaded areas seeing more slab formation and sheltered areas harboring a weaker interface.

Aspects: All aspects.

Elevations: Alpine, Treeline.

Likelihood

Possible - Likely

Expected Size

1.5 - 3

Persistent Slabs

An icon showing Persistent Slabs

Persistent weak layers are being tested by the critical load from recent snowfall and wind. Shallower, more reactive storm slabs carry the risk of triggering one of these deeper weak layers to create larger, more destructive avalanches.

Aspects: All aspects.

Elevations: Alpine, Treeline.

Likelihood

Possible

Expected Size

2 - 3.5

Valid until: Jan 2nd, 2020 5:00PM

Login