Avalanche Forecast

Issued: Dec 24th, 2018 10:00AM

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

Northwest Avalanche Center NWAC, Northwest Avalanche Center

Merry Xmas! We got a fresh coat of snow from santa. Don’t let the grinch fool you into thinking that persistent slabs have gone away. Recently, a large avalanche cycle occurred. Conservative terrain choices will be necessary to stay safe in the mountains.

Summary

Discussion

Snow and Avalanche Discussion:

On Christmas Eve the skies cleared, but valley fog formed over much of the eastern slopes. On the 23rd, areas in the East North zone received from 5” to 8” of cold snow. Winds were light to moderate. These were still strong enough to transport the new snow near and above treeline, where recent shallow drifts may be found. 

A very large natural avalanche cycle occurred between December 18th and 20th on persistent weak layers in the zone. Many of these avalanches are suspected to have run on basal facets. Spire Gully, Silver Star, and others are suspected to have run on these. Explosive triggered avalanches stepped down to weak layers near the ground at Mission Ridge around the same time frame. An observer reported a collapse near the top of Mt. Lillian in the Blewett Pass area on the 24th, indicating that hard slabs may still be reactive on weak layers near the ground.

Snowpack Discussion

Regional Synopsis: December 24, 2018

In most parts of the state, a stout melt freeze crust was formed when it rained to high elevations around Thanksgiving. The one exception to this event was in the East North Zone, where the precipitation from the Thanksgiving storm was all snow. A quick storm at the end of November put a small amount of snow above the melt-freeze crust, and preserved the older basal facets in the northeastern areas.

Cold and clear weather dominated the first week in December, with valley fog and very cold temperatures east of the crest. The surface snow sat around and decomposed. Surface hoar grew large on top of this.

The jet stream took aim at the Pacific Northwest in the 2nd week of December.  Most notably, light storms buried and preserved a widespread layer of surface hoar and/or near surface facets on December 9th. From December 9th to December 23rd, storms kept coming. Freezing levels fluctuated, but never moved much above 5000ft throughout the Cascades (although the southernmost volcanoes and Mt. Hood saw rain well above 6000).

Initially, the storm track favored the northern zones. The accompanying avalanche cycle began on December 11th. Most of these slides were soft slabs, but some propagated widely on the December 9th layer. Higher snowfall totals in the West North resulted in very large (D3+) avalanches in the mountains along Hwy 542.

A second, and larger avalanche cycle occurred during heavy snowfall and strong wind events between December 18th and 20th. Although these cycles were once again most prevalent in the northern and eastern zones, big storm totals around Mt. Rainier tipped the balance down south as well. This 2nd cycle was impressive, with very large and destructive avalanches (some D4) reported. The culprit was once again the December 9th surface hoar/facets (and/or the basal facets in the northern and eastern zones).

Today we have a large difference in snowpack depths between the Pacific Crest and the Eastern Slope. This is nothing unusual, as more often than not the west side of the Cascades and the passes get more snow than areas further east. Moving forward, places with a deep snowpack (say greater than 5ft) and warmer temperatures may continue to gain strength. Areas with a shallow snowpack (say less than 3.5ft) may take much longer. In a general and applied sense, this means the avalanche danger/conditions may begin to diverge between the western and eastern zones.  

As the skies clear and we move into high pressure, take note as to which avalanche paths have run large on deep, weak layers, and those which haven’t. Be sure to track surface conditions, as this next period of cold, clear weather may create the next weak layer when the storm track does turn back toward us. As always, please share your photos and experiences with us!

Happy Holidays

 

Problems

Persistent Slabs

An icon showing Persistent Slabs

The snowpack on the eastern slope is shallow and weak. There are two types of persistent weaknesses that have become apparent: Basal facets near and above treeline, and surface hoar/facets buried on December 9th near and below treeline. Both layers can be found near the ground.

Dangerous slopes will be at upper elevations where thick slabs may have formed from strong winds a number of days ago. On the evening of December 20th, a gust of 119mph was recorded at Mission Ridge. These very strong winds transported lots of snow, and created very hard and thick slabs. If you hit a thin spot on one of these, it could result in a large and dangerous avalanche. Near and above treeline, pay attention to avoid dense slabs, especially where they may overly thin, rocky areas. Below treeline, avoid steep unsupported slopes in open stands of trees, as you may still trigger an avalanche on buried surface hoar in these areas. The best way to reduce the risk of this high consequence situation is to minimize your exposure to slopes capable of producing large avalanches.

-Avoid trusting dense, old wind drifts on steep slopes near and above treeline.

-Attempt to put a significant distance in between where you are traveling and where avalanches start, run, and stop.

-Don’t underestimate how far and wide these could run when identifying safer areas to stop and regroup.

Release of a cohesive layer of soft to hard snow (a slab) in the middle to upper snowpack, when the bond to an underlying persistent weak layer breaks. Persistent layers include: surface hoar, depth hoar, near-surface facets, or faceted snow. Persistent weak layers can continue to produce avalanches for days, weeks or even months, making them especially dangerous and tricky. As additional snow and wind events build a thicker slab on top of the persistent weak layer, this avalanche problem may develop into a Deep Persistent Slabs.

 

The best ways to manage the risk from Persistent Slabs is to make conservative terrain choices. They can be triggered by light loads and weeks after the last storm. The slabs often propagate in surprising and unpredictable ways. This makes this problem difficult to predict and manage and requires a wide safety buffer to handle the uncertainty.

 

This Persistent Slab was triggered remotely, failed on a layer of faceted snow in the middle of the snowpack, and crossed several terrain features.

Persistent slabs can be triggered by light loads and weeks after the last storm. You can trigger them remotely and they often propagate across and beyond terrain features that would otherwise confine wind and storm slabs. Give yourself a wide safety buffer to handle the uncertainty.

Aspects: All aspects.

Elevations: All elevations.

Likelihood

Possible

Expected Size

1 - 2

Valid until: Dec 25th, 2018 10:00AM