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RegisterJan 17th, 2023–Jan 18th, 2023
North Columbia, South Columbia, Blue River, Clearwater, Premier, Grohman, Clemina, Jordan, North Monashee, North Selkirk, Shuswap, West Purcell, Badshot-Battle, Central Selkirk, Goat, Gold, Kokanee, North Okanagan, Retallack, Valhalla, Whatshan.
Continue to make conservative terrain choices and consider the consequences of an avalanche on a chosen slope. The snowpack remains weak and untrustworthy.
Avalanche activity has gradually slowed down after a widespread natural cycle occurred on Friday and Saturday. There were numerous large (size 2) human triggered avalanches on Sunday, and then on Monday there were fewer human triggered avalanches and they generally were smaller (size 1 to 1.5).
The previous natural cycle produced large to very large avalanches (size 2 to 3.5) at all elevations and aspects on multiple persistent weak layers. Most of the activity was on the two surface hoar layers from January, but there was also activity on the November facets near the bottom of the snowpack. Human triggered avalanches since the storm have primarily been on surface hoar layers buried 40 to 80 cm deep, many occurring in sparely forested terrain. A few large (size 1.5 to 2.5) deep persistent avalanches were triggered with heavy loads on Monday.
New snow is gradually accumulating above settled snow from last week's warm storm. At lower elevations, a rain crust exists near the surface, with reported elevations extending up to 2000 m around Nelson, 1700 m around Revelstoke, and 1600 m around Valemount.
Two persistent weak layers in the middle of the snowpack remain reactive to human triggering. They are both surface hoar layers that formed in early January and are typically found 40 to 80 cm deep throughout the Columbias. There are also some deeper facet and surface hoar layers that formed in December, but recent snowpack observations suggest they are strengthening.
The bottom of the snowpack is made up of large weak facets buried in late November, which has caused an atypical deep persistent slab problem for this region.
Tuesday night
Cloudy, isolated flurries bringing trace amounts of snow, 30 km/h southwest wind, treeline temperatures cooling to -8 °C.
Wednesday
Cloudy, light flurries with 1 to 3 cm of snow, 30 to 40 km/h southwest wind, treeline temperatures around -5 °C.
ThursdayCold front passes in the morning with 5 to 10 cm of new snow then sunny periods in the afternoon, 30 km/h northwest wind, treeline temperatures drop to -10 °C.
FridayMix of sun and cloud, 30 km/h west wind, treeline temperatures around -8 °C.
More details can be found in the Mountain Weather Forecast.