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Avalanche Forecast

Mar 13th, 2025–Mar 14th, 2025
Alpine
4: High
The avalanche danger rating in the alpine will be high
Treeline
3: Considerable
The avalanche danger rating at treeline will be considerable
Below Treeline
3: Considerable
The avalanche danger rating below treeline will be considerable
Alpine
3: Considerable
The avalanche danger rating in the alpine will be considerable
Treeline
3: Considerable
The avalanche danger rating at treeline will be considerable
Below Treeline
3: Considerable
The avalanche danger rating below treeline will be considerable
Alpine
3: Considerable
The avalanche danger rating in the alpine will be considerable
Treeline
3: Considerable
The avalanche danger rating at treeline will be considerable
Below Treeline
2: Moderate
The avalanche danger rating below treeline will be moderate

Since March 9th, 30-90 cm of snow has fallen, nearly doubling the snowpack in areas like Bow Summit. Recent reports of whumps, remote triggers, and natural avalanches mean human triggering remains very likely. Stick to low-angle terrain and avoid overhead exposure until conditions improve.

Confidence

High

Avalanche Summary

There was limitied visibility in many areas today. Sunshine was a ski-cutting size 1-1.5 storm slabs (30-60cm deep) in the Delerium dive today; all reloads that had formed since the AM.

Since Saturday, there have been many natural avalanches up to size 3 and human-triggered avalanches. Most of the activity appears to be happening East of the divide, but there have been fewer observations in deeper snowpack areas to the West.

Snowpack Summary

10-15cm in the past 24 hours and 30-90cm since March 9th, with the most snow in the Bow Summit region, along the Wapta, and in Little Yoho. Strong S winds have formed slabs over sun crusts on steep S aspects or firm wind-affected snow elsewhere.

A persistent weak layer (Feb 22/Jan 30 facets) is buried 50-100 cm deep. In shallower eastern areas, the mid/lower snowpack is very weak with facets and depth hoar, while deeper western areas are more consolidated (see profiles below).

Weather Summary

Thursday night: 5-15cm

Friday: Trace snow, light-mod winds and cooler temperatures (-9 to -12C.)

See tables below for more info

Terrain and Travel Advice

  • Make conservative terrain choices and avoid overhead hazard.
  • Remote triggering is a big concern, be aware of the potential for wide propagations and large, destructive avalanches at all elevations.

Avalanche Problems

Persistent Slabs

In many areas, the storm snow has overloaded the persistent layers (see snowpack summary) in the mid and lower pack, resulting in very large avalanches.

Aspects: All aspects.

Elevations: All elevations.

Likelihood: Very Likely

Expected Size: 2 - 3.5

Storm Slabs

Since Saturday, 30-90 cm of storm snow and strong southerly winds have created storm and wind slabs at all elevations. More snow fell in the northern forecast area (Bow Summit). Settlement of the surface snow means a stiffer slab is forming, potentially allowing wider propagations.

Aspects: All aspects.

Elevations: All elevations.

Likelihood: Very Likely

Expected Size: 1.5 - 3