Avalanche Forecast
Issued: Mar 9th, 2016 8:44AM
The alpine rating is Storm Slabs and Persistent Slabs.
, the treeline rating is , and the below treeline rating is Known problems includeSummary
Confidence
High
Weather Forecast
Thursday: 15-20 cm new snow expected with the heaviest amounts likely to be in the south of the region. Strong southwest winds up to 80 km/h expected at ridgetop. Freezing levels expected to rise to 1800 m near noon. Friday: mostly dry with some lingering flurries. Some clearing expected. Winds becoming light southeasterly. Freezing level around 1700 m. Saturday: 5-10 cm new snow, with moderate southwesterly winds and freezing level remaining around 1700 m.
Avalanche Summary
On Tuesday, several slab avalanches were noted on solar aspects in recent storm snow, including one very large size 3 that started on a hanging convex feature at 2400 m and ran all the way to valley bottom. The previous two days before that (Sunday and Monday) had seen an avalanche cycle mostly on northwest to northeast aspects above 1800 m with sizes averaging size 2 and crown depths averaging 50 cm. Most of these avalanches appeared to be initiating in a layer of surface hoar buried on Feb-27. On Sunday, there was a fatal avalanche near Sicamous that occurred on a north aspect at 2025 m that most likely ran on the Feb-27 surface hoar layer.
Snowpack Summary
A surface crust that formed on all aspects up to at least 1700 m is expected to get buried by new snow. In the Monashees, you may find an additional thin crust (from Mar-5) in the top 40 cm of snow that was reactive up to size 2 on Sunday. Approximately 70 cm below the surface lies a variable interface that comprises surface hoar, facets, a crust, or some combination of all three. This layer was buried on or around Feb-27 and has been very active since the weekend. I anticipate this layer will continue to be reactive to sled or skier traffic and/or additional loading from new snow. A previous surface hoar/crust layer buried Feb-10 is now down over a metre. This layer has become less likely to trigger, but continues to be discussed as a possible failure plane by commercial operations. It's presence keeps open the possibility of very large avalanches, as a small surface slide could step down into this deeper layer.
Problems
Storm Slabs
Aspects: North, North East, East, South East, South.
Elevations: All elevations.
Likelihood
Expected Size
Persistent Slabs
Aspects: All aspects.
Elevations: Alpine, Treeline.
Likelihood
Expected Size
Valid until: Mar 10th, 2016 2:00PM