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RegisterApr 5th, 2021–Apr 6th, 2021
Purcells.
Minimize exposure to large looming cornices weakening with daytime warming and solar radiation. Cornice fall could trigger a slab on the slope below.
Isolated pockets of wind slab may be found in immediate leeward features in the alpine.
Tuesday: Mix of sun and cloud. Ridgetop wind light from the southwest. Alpine temperatures near -2 and freezing levels 2000 m.
Wednesday: Mix of sun and cloud with isolated flurries. Ridgetop wind moderate to strong from the southwest. Alpine temperatures -2 and freezing levels 1600 m.
Thursday: Mix of sun and cloud with a trace of new snow. Ridgetop wind light from the southwest. Alpine temperatures near -6 and freezing lvels 1700 m.
Cornices have been reactive in the last few days both to explosives and naturally, occasionally triggering wind slabs on slopes below.
A natural size 3 was reported on Thursday in the Dogtooth range. It was on a southeast aspect in the alpine and is suspected to have solar-triggered and run on the crust buried in mid-March.
Reports from Wednesday included small (size 1) wet loose point releases from steep solar aspects and explosive triggered wind slabs on north to east facing ridgetops.
The convective nature of Sunday's storm resulted in greatly variable snowfall amounts through the region, as much as 50 cm around Golden and 5-20 cm elsewhere. The recent snow was accompanied by strong southwest wind and may have formed isolated pockets of wind slab on leeward slopes at upper elevations. Reports indicate that the new snow is bonding well to underlying surfaces which include wind-affected snow in the alpine or crust on solar aspects and below 1900 m. Below this elevation and on solar aspects the new snow dusts crusty surfaces down to 1500 m. Below 1500 m, the moist snowpack is quickly diminishing.
A widespread crust layer from the mid-March warm spell can be found 30-60 cm deep, and a small surface hoar and facets have been observed at this depth on some isolated north-facing slopes. Reports suggest the snow is generally well bonded to these layers but isolated instances of large solar-triggered slab avalanches running on the crust have been observed. Deeper layers are strong and have been unreactive over the past few weeks.