Avalanche Forecast

Issued: Dec 24th, 2019 5:00PM

The alpine rating is considerable, the treeline rating is considerable, and the below treeline rating is moderate.

Avalanche Canada dsaly, Avalanche Canada

A heavy load of recent snow is settling over a deep persistent weak layer. Any additional load, such as a smaller avalanche, cornice failure, or person, can result in large, destructive avalanches.

Summary

Confidence

Moderate - Uncertainty is due to how quickly the snowpack will recover and gain strength.

Weather Forecast

Tuesday Night: Mostly clear with a few clouds. Alpine temperature -10 C. West wind, 15-30 km/hr. Freezing level valley bottom.

Wednesday: Mix of sun and cloud. Alpine temperature -9 C. West wind, 10-15 km/hr.

Thursday: Mix of sun and cloud. Alpine temperature -9 C. West wind, 15-35 km/hr.

Friday: Mainly cloudy. Alpine temperature -12 C. West wind 15-35 km/hr.

Avalanche Summary

A natural avalanche cycle occurred Saturday with heavy loading from snow/rain. The intense loading triggered large (size 2) storm slab avalanches and very large (2.5-3) deep persistent avalanches.

On Saturday and into Sunday, large storm slab, wet slab and deep persistent avalanches were reported. Explosives triggered storm slab avalanches to size 2 in upper elevations and skiers triggered wet slab avalanches to size 2 at lower elevations. Most notable (and concerning) were reports of both natural and explosives triggering very large (up to size 3) deep persistent slab avalanches with avalanche crowns 40-200 cm. 

Snowpack Summary

Upwards of 50-100 cm storm snow is settling around the region. At higher elevations into the alpine, wind is impacting loose, dry snow, and building wind slabs and cornices. Up to 1600 m, rain saturated the snowpack.

The bottom 30-50 cm of the snowpack consists of weak facets and crusts from November and October, these weak layers are the failure plane for recent large (size 2-2.5) deep persistant avalanches. The latest forecaster blog discusses managing this complex avalanche problem, check it out here.

Snowpack depths range between 80-200 cm around treeline and taper rapidly below.

Terrain and Travel

  • Minimize exposure to overhead avalanche terrain, large avalanches may reach the end of runout zones.
  • Be aware of the potential for large avalanches due to the presence of a deep persistent slab.
  • Cornice failure may trigger large avalanches.
  • Watch for newly formed and reactive wind slabs as you transition into wind affected terrain.
  • If triggered, wind slabs avalanches may step down to deeper layers resulting in larger avalanches.

Valid until: Dec 25th, 2019 5:00PM

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