Register for an account and never miss a forecast again!
RegisterRegister for an account and never miss a forecast again!
RegisterFeb 12th, 2020–Feb 13th, 2020
Purcells.
Light precipitation on Thursday along with recent winds blowing from a variety of directions will keep wind slabs at upper elevations the main concern.
Wednesday Night: Cloudy with clear breaks. Light west and northwest wind. Alpine high temperatures around -8.
Thursday: Scattered flurries, accumulation 2-5 cm. Light to moderate southwest wind. Alpine high temperatures around -7. Freezing level 1000 m
Friday: Mainly cloudy with isolated flurries. Moderate west wind. Alpine high temperatures around -6. Freezing level 900 m
Saturday: Mainly cloudy with sunny breaks and isolated flurries. Moderate west wind. Alpine high temperatures around -6. Freezing level 1000 m
Tuesday's reports include two skier/rider triggered size 1 wind slab avalanches at tree line.
On Monday there were reports from the central part of the region of two explosives triggered deep persistent avalanches size 2.5 and 3 running on north aspects in the alpine. One of these ran on facets sitting glacial ice.
Sunday and Monday's reports also showed a few windslab avalanches running to size 1.5 in alpine terrain from a variety of aspects.
20-40 cm of snow accumulating through the last week sits over older wind-affected snow at high elevations, or over a widespread melt-freeze or rain crust with a variable upper extent of 1800-2000 metres in elevation. The recent snow has mainly shown reactivity where winds have had a chance to redistribute it into new slabs.
A weak layer of surface hoar may still be found about 90 cm deep around Golden and Kimberley, 50 cm deep around Invermere, and 130 cm deep along Kootenay Lake. Recent reports from the Golden area suggest a positive stabilizing trend. At lower elevations this layer has likely been bridged over by the above-mentioned crust.
The base of the snowpack contains basal facets. It remains possible to trigger these deep weak layers in shallow rocky start zones or from a heavy trigger such as a cornice fall.