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RegisterApr 28th, 2023–Apr 29th, 2023
Sea To Sky, South Coast Inland, Brandywine, Garibaldi, Homathko, Spearhead, Tantalus, Sasquatch, Sky Pilot, Birkenhead, Coquihalla, Duffey, Harrison-Fraser, Manning, Skagit, South Chilcotin, Stein, Taseko.
A very high freezing level is destabilizing the snowpack, triggering numerous different avalanche problems. Check out the latest Forecasters' Blog for more information.
We've seen widespread wet loose and cornice avalanche releases, of which some has stepped down to buried weak layers, producing very large avalanches. We expect this trend to continue. See here and here for a couple examples.
Riders should expect wet loose avalanches and cornice failures during periods of warm air and sunny skies. Avoiding steep slopes when the snow feels sloppy and avoiding cornice exposure are good travel habits.
The likelihood of seeing very large avalanches releasing on a buried weak layer will increase with each day of warming. This is particularly true for days without an overnight surface refreeze. Humans are most likely to trigger this layer in steep and rocky slopes where the snowpack is relatively thin.
The snow surface is moist to mountain tops, which is unlikely to freeze overnight.
The middle of the snowpack is consolidated with various layers of moist snow, hard snow, and melt-freeze crusts.
A layer of weak faceted grains is found near the base of the snowpack at treeline and alpine elevations.
Cornices are large and looming at this time of year and are weakening with intense warming.
A ridge of high pressure will bring mostly sunny skies and freezing levels between 3500 m and 4000 m until Saturday night. A cooling trend with rain and high-alpine snow is forecast for Sunday and Monday, with the freezing level around 2000 m to 2800 m.
More details can be found in the Mountain Weather Forecast.