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RegisterFeb 6th, 2017–Feb 7th, 2017
Snoqualmie Pass.
New snow instabilities within the deep recent snowfall will continue to settle out, but continue to make conservative terrain choices by choosing lower angled terrain and avoiding wind loaded slopes. Recently formed wind slabs may be found on a variety of aspects Tuesday. Travel with deep snow safety precautions in place.
Showers should end or become widely scattered Tuesday morning. Cold temperatures and light winds are expected Tuesday. This should allow for slow settlement and stabilization of recent wind and storm slabs formed during the storm cycle since Friday.
Storm slabs may still be sensitive on Tuesday, but likely confined to the most recent storm snow over the past day. While deeper storm slab instabilities should be stabilizing, it may still be possible to trigger a large storm slab avalanche in isolated areas.
The unconsolidated snow is deep, so being aware that loose dry avalanches triggered on steep slopes can entrain substantial snow.
Instabilities within the deep new snow may need more time to settle out so make conservative terrain choices by choosing lower angled terrain and avoiding any wind loaded slopes, mainly near and above treeline.
Note that deep snow conditions now exist in most terrain. Travel with a partner and use good communication and keep your partner in view at all times.
Weather and Snowpack
A strong storm cycle began Friday with 3-4 feet of snow recorded along the west slopes on average, through Monday afternoon. A slow warming trend affected all areas Saturday with rain reaching 4000-4500 feet in the south Cascades. Cool easterly flow kept temperatures locally cool at Pass level at Stevens and Snoqualmie Pass through the day Saturday, with a slight warm-up Saturday night with a switch to westerly flow.
Sensitive but generally shallow storm slabs were reported throughout the west slopes on Saturday from ski area control work and several backcountry observations. Intense precipitation rates Sunday morning became light to moderate during the day. Continued moderate to occasionally heavy snow showers fell through the day Monday at cool temperatures. The cooling trend Monday and settlement rates during the previous warming should all help the storm snow to become less sensitive to trigger.
Recent Observations
North
Mt. Baker pro-patrol produced large storm slabs of 24-36" (60-90 cm) during morning control work and at least one natural storm slab avalanche was observed outside the ski area.
Central
Stevens Pass ski area and DOT professionals reported very touchy storm slabs during control work Sunday morning. Some slabs broke into deeper storm layers from earlier in the weekend with up to size D2 or D2.5 slides observed. Loose dry avalanches in steeper terrain started small but quickly gouged down and entrained additional storm snow. Pro-observer Ian Nicholson was at Yodelin just east of Stevens on Sunday and found soft storm slabs propagating around 50 cm down in ECTs and easily ski triggered on short test slopes. Collapses within the storm snow produced whumpfing while breaking trail.
Alpental pro-patrol found easily triggered storm slabs in and outside of their ski area with skier triggered storm slabs up to 50 cm. The storm slab in the photo below broke about 15-20 cm above the 1/29 rain crust in the Snoqualmie area.
Skier triggered storm slab photo from John Stimberis 2-5-17, Denny Mt
South
NWAC pro-observer Dallas Glass was in the Crystal backcountry in Bullion Basin Sunday and found a reactive storm layer 35-40 cm down in snowpit tests on all aspects below and near treeline. Shallower storm slabs could be triggered on test slopes. Storm snow from this cycle had settled to about 60-65 cm. No natural avalanches were observed and recent wind transport was localized to near the ridgeline.