Avalanche Forecast

Issued: Mar 1st, 2025 4:00PM

The alpine rating is considerable, the treeline rating is moderate, and the below treeline rating is low. Known problems include Persistent Slabs.

Avalanche Canada Avalanche Canada, Avalanche Canada

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Remote triggers and wide propagations have surprised riders this week. Keep it conservative and resist venturing into consequential terrain.

Summary

Confidence

Moderate

Avalanche Summary

Large, scary persistent slab avalanche activity has been reported daily this week. Between Wednesday and Friday, naturals continued to be reported size 2-3 and remotely-triggered slabs (triggered by riders from hundreds of meters away) size 2-2.5. These slabs are failing on a layer of surface hoar buried 50 to 90 cm deep. They have been observed at alpine and treeline elevations.

Snowpack Summary

A widespread surface crust exists on most aspects and elevations.

50 to 60 cm of settled snow sits over a weak layer of facets, surface hoar and sun crust buried in mid February. Numerous large natural and remote-triggered avalanches have failed on this layer throughout the region this week.

Another weak facet/crust/surface hoar layer, from late January, is buried 40 to 80 cm deep. This layer has been the culprit for many very large natural, remote and human-triggered avalanches near Whistler in recent days.

Weather Summary

Saturday night

Partly cloudy. 10 to 20 km/h southwest ridgetop wind. Treeline temperature -2°C. Freezing level dropping to 1000 m.

Sunday

Mostly cloudy with a trace of snow. <10 km/h variable ridgetop wind. Treeline temperature -1°C. Freezing level 1800 m.

Monday

Sunny. 10 to 20 km/h north ridgetop wind. Treeline temperature -2°C. Freezing level 1600 m.

Monday

A mix of sun and cloud. 10 to 20 km/h southwest ridgetop wind. Treeline temperature -2°C. Freezing level 1600 m.

More details can be found in the Mountain Weather Forecast.

Terrain and Travel Advice

  • Be mindful that deep instabilities are still present and have produced recent large avalanches.
  • Keep in mind that human triggering may persist as natural avalanches taper off.
  • Avoid thin areas like rocky outcrops where you're most likely to trigger avalanches on deep weak layers.
  • Use careful route-finding and stick to moderate angled slopes with low consequences.

Problems

Persistent Slabs

An icon showing Persistent Slabs

Persistent weak layers have been reactive in recent days, with remote triggers and wide propagations. Cooler weather may improve things but don't let your guard down. The consequences of triggering an avalanche on these layers is high.

Aspects: North, North East, East, West, North West.

Elevations: Alpine, Treeline.

Likelihood

Possible - Likely

Expected Size

1 - 3

Valid until: Mar 2nd, 2025 4:00PM

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