Avalanche Forecast
Issued: Jan 20th, 2015 7:56AM
The alpine rating is Wind Slabs and Persistent Slabs.
, the treeline rating is , and the below treeline rating is Known problems includeSummary
Confidence
Fair
Weather Forecast
A ridge of high pressure should keep the region dry through Friday. On Wednesday, mostly sunny conditions expected with freezing levels around 1000m and light-to-moderate alpine wind. On Thursday, a mix of sun and cloud is expected with freezing levels rising to around 2000m and moderate-to-strong alpine wind from the SW-W. On Friday, mostly sunny conditions are expected with freezing levels over 2000m and moderate-to-strong alpine winds from the SW-W.
Avalanche Summary
On Tuesday, explosives triggered 3 persistent slabs up to size 2. These released on the mid-Dec layer down 40-60cm. They were all on east aspects around 2000m elevation. On Monday, explosives triggered a size 2.5 deep persistent slab on the early-Nov layer near the ground. This was on an east aspect at 1700m in the Harvey Pass area. On Sunday, several size 1 storm slabs and wind slabs were ski cut. A natural size 2 was reported in the Waterton area. Natural avalanche activity is generally not expected on Wednesday but remains possible in isolated areas such as steep sun exposed slopes. Human-triggering is possible or likely in wind loaded areas and steep terrain features, especially where surface hoar underlies the recent storm snow.
Snowpack Summary
10-20cm of new snow fell over the weekend. Strong winds have redistributed the new snow in exposed terrain and wind slabs have formed in lee features at alpine and isolated areas at treeline. The storm snow buried a layer of surface hoar and/or a crust that exists in many places up to 1900m. At higher elevations the new slow fell on widely wind affected surfaces. The mid-December crust layer is down 40-80cm. In many places this crust is overlaid by facets and/or surface hoar. In areas where the overlying slab is thick and cohesive, large avalanches remain possible on this interface. Closer to the ground a crust/facet interface that formed in November is generally dormant.
Problems
Wind Slabs
Aspects: North, North East, East, South East, South.
Elevations: Alpine, Treeline.
Likelihood
Expected Size
Persistent Slabs
Aspects: All aspects.
Elevations: Alpine, Treeline.
Likelihood
Expected Size
Valid until: Jan 21st, 2015 2:00PM