Avalanche Forecast
Issued: Apr 14th, 2015 9:04AM
The alpine rating is Storm Slabs, Cornices and Loose Wet.
, the treeline rating is , and the below treeline rating is Known problems includeSummary
Confidence
Fair - Timing or intensity of solar radiation is uncertain
Weather Forecast
A ridge of high pressure should keep the region mainly dry until Friday night. On Wednesday, mostly sunny conditions are expected with light-moderate alpine winds from the SW. Freezing levels are expected to be around 1000m in the morning and 1700m in the afternoon. On Thursday, a mix of sun and cloud is expected with moderate alpine winds from the W to NW. Freezing levels are forecast to be around 1500m in the morning and climb to around 2000m in the afternoon. Friday looks be similar with mainly sunny conditions, light alpine winds, and freezing levels reaching as high as 2500m. A weak storm system is currently forecast to reach the region Friday night.
Avalanche Summary
On Monday, isolated natural avalanches were reported as well as several skier triggered avalanches. These storm slabs were typically 30-50cm thick and were generally occurring above 2100m elevation. A couple small wet avalanches were reported from lower elevations. Several remotely triggered avalanches have been reported over the last 3 days and were triggered from up to 60m away. These remote triggers as well as reports of whumphing and wide propagations are suggesting that the weak layer below the storm snow is very reactive in some areas. Over the weekend, natural, human-triggered, and explosive-triggered storm slab avalanches up to size 2.5 were ongoing. Towards the southern parts of the region that received less recent snowfall, wind slabs in specific areas have been the primary concern. On Wednesday, lingering storm slabs are expected to be reactive to human-triggering, especially in steep alpine terrain and wind-loaded terrain features. The sun is expected to trigger natural activity on steep solar aspects including both loose wet avalanches and slab avalanches. Cornices will become weak in the afternoon and natural cornice falls have the potential to trigger large slabs.
Snowpack Summary
20-60cm of recent snowfall overlies a weak layer that was buried on Friday. This weak layer typically consists of surface hoar and facets overlying a melt-freeze crust that exists everywhere except high elevation north-facing terrain. Recent snowfall amounts are highest in the north of the region and taper off to south. In exposed alpine terrain, strong SW winds have redistributed the recent storm snow forming thicker wind slabs in leeward features. Large cornices exist in the alpine and may become weak with daytime warming. There are three dormant persistent weak layers that we are continuing to track. The late-March crust is down 50-70cm and was reactive last week during the warm period. The mid-March and mid-February layers are typically down between 70 and 100cm and have been dormant for several weeks. These layers have the potential to wake up with sustained warming, a significant rain event, and/or a big cornice fall.
Problems
Storm Slabs
Aspects: All aspects.
Elevations: Alpine, Treeline.
Likelihood
Expected Size
Cornices
Aspects: North, North East, East, South East, South.
Elevations: Alpine.
Likelihood
Expected Size
Loose Wet
Aspects: North, North East, East, South East.
Elevations: All elevations.
Likelihood
Expected Size
Valid until: Apr 15th, 2015 2:00PM