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RegisterJan 15th, 2016–Jan 16th, 2016
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Back country travel in avalanche terrain near and above tree line along the Cascade east slopes is not recommended on Saturday.
Active weather and avalanches should be seen this weekend!
A front will approach the Northwest Saturday morning and should cross the Cascades Saturday midday. This will cause increasing winds and moderate to heavy rain or snow with warming on Saturday. A change to rain or snow showers should be seen following the front Saturday afternoon and night.
This weather will build generally upside down snow layers of increasing density near the surface and snow may also change to rain in some areas. About 6-12 inches of upside down snow should be seen est of the crest in especially in the higher terrain bands by late Saturday.
This snow will load the January 3rd and January 11th persistent slab layers were they exist along the Cascade east slopes. This should produce natural or triggered avalanches that could be remotely triggered, propagate around terrain features and bury, injure or kill.
New wind slab will also be very likely mainly on lee north to east slopes.
New storm slab due to the warming trend is also very likely on varied aspects where winds are lighter and snow rapidly accumulates to deeper than a few inches.
Avalanches releasing in near surface layers on Saturday may entrain previous snow producing large avalanches.
Fair weather over the New Year caused extensive surface hoar and near surface faceted snow. This was buried by about 4-13 inches of snowfall along the east slopes from about January 3-6th.
Another fair weather period was seen from about January 7-10th. Surface hoar and near surface faceted snow formed again in many areas during this period.
The latest period of snowfall has been from about January 11-15th with about 4-16 inches along the east slopes.
There has been unexpected dangerous avalanche activity along the west slopes Thursday and today. It looks like persistent layers buried about January 3rd and and January 11th are beginning to get active due to loading from the past couple storm cycles. There is less information for the east slopes but there are always persistent weak layers along the east slopes if they are present on the west slopes.
The latest report via the North Cascades Guides is from Delancey Ridge on Wednesday where easily triggered wind slab of about 20-25 cm was seen on north and south slopes at about 6000 feet which was releasing on a persistent crust layer buried on January 11th. A 20-25 cm storm slab was also remotely triggered on a south slope at about 5000 feet which released either a persistent crust buried on January 11th or on persistent buried surface hoar from January 3rd. Natural avalanches were also heard in the area.
A couple reports are available for Thursday via the NWAC Observations page. Skiers triggered 10 inch slabs on a crust which may be a persistent layer on north slopes at 6000 feet Silver Star Mountain. Snow pits near Leavenworth had a easy to spot persistent buried surface hoar layer at 35-40 cm from the surface.