Avalanche Forecast

Issued: Feb 12th, 2020 10:00AM

The alpine rating is below threshold, the treeline rating is below threshold, and the below treeline rating is below threshold.

Northwest Avalanche Center NWAC, Northwest Avalanche Center

Email

Steer around steep slopes with wind drifted snow at upper elevations. Recently formed wind slabs may be found further below ridgelines than usual due to recent strong winds. Don’t linger on slopes below large cornices. A very large avalanche was triggered by cornice fall near White Pass. See the West South forecast for more details. 

Summary

Discussion

Earlier in the week, strong to extreme W-NW winds above treeline likely moved significant amounts of snow for terrain closer to the Cascade crest. The same winds may have also caused erratic loading patterns and formed wind slabs further downslope than usual. Use caution before committing to slopes steeper than 35 degrees where you find stiff or textured snow surfaces.

Also at upper elevations near the Cascade crest, cornices have likely grown large since the last storm cycle. Be leery while traveling along ridgelines and don’t linger below slopes with large overhanging cornices. 

On Wednesday, a very large avalanche released in the White Pass area when backcountry travelers unintentionally triggered a very large cornice onto the slope below. The avalanche occurred on an East aspect at 6700’, breaking several feet deep and just above the ground in places, likely failing on a weak layer buried back in December. This is the definition of a low-likelihood /high consequence event. This information is most relevant to travelers at upper elevations near the Cascade crest. Check the West South forecast for more details. At lower and mid-elevations and for areas further east of the Cascade crest, generally safe avalanche conditions are expected. 

Forecast Schedule and No Rating definition

We do not have enough specific snowpack information to issue an avalanche hazard rating for the East South zone. However, even when No Rating is applied, applicable avalanche conditions and backcountry travel advice will be provided throughout the season - this forecast is updated every day, all winter long!  When weather systems produce very dangerous avalanche conditions in adjacent zones, NWAC will issue an avalanche warning for this zone as well.

Snowpack Discussion

February 6, 2020 (The regional synopsis is updated every Thursday @ 6 pm)

If we could choose one word to sum up the last week, and possibly 2020 in general, that word would be fluid. As of February 6, we are in the midst of yet another atmospheric river event, bringing large amounts of low elevation rain and high elevation snow to our region. The WSDOT-SCR avalanche team relayed that this past January has been the wettest on record at Snoqualmie Pass since precipitation records started in the 80s, and it’s their second wettest month on record. With such potent storms, it’s no surprise that our snowpack and avalanche danger has also been fluid, with fluctuations between high and low danger over short time periods. 

February began on the tail end of our largest rain and wind event of the season, with many NWAC weather stations recording wind gusts of over 100 mph and impressive water numbers as high as almost 10 inches in a 48 hour timeframe. 

Maximum wind gusts from weather stations in the NWAC Network Friday 1/31 into Saturday 2/1

This event had freezing levels surge to around 8000 feet across the region, introducing rain to a cold dry snowpack at upper elevations for the first time this season. This included rain above 7000 feet in the Washington Pass area, which had largely escaped the wrath of warmer storms up to this point. Dangerous avalanche conditions during this period produced widespread wet avalanches in most zones as large as D3. Along with Loose Wet and Wet Slab avalanches, Cornices failed naturally, and Glide avalanches were observed in multiple zones.  

Natural glide avalanche (D2) that occurred on a SE aspect at 4400ft on a convex rock slab between Schriebers Meadow and the Railroad Grade. 02/02/20 Photo: Andrew Kiefer

As the rain finally subsided, cold air flooded our region, allowing the wet snow surface to begin to freeze from the top down. This sharp cooldown created what we are calling the 2/1 crust and allowed for Low danger across the region for a few days. The 2/1 crust varies in thickness but should exist in all areas of the region below ~8000 feet and may be considered as our “new ground”. During this period of low danger, most zones picked up modest amounts of low-density snow to overlay the 2/1 crust and even had a bit of sunshine.

Unfortunately, the period of low danger was short-lived, when two days later, another atmospheric river was on our doorstep. This time, the event started off cooler and had lower projected freezing levels. Many zones in the region were able to pick up a foot or more of new snow in all elevation bands before a switch to rain, with upper elevations receiving multiple feet of snow, creating what we are referring to as the 2/4 interface. The setup of heavy fresh snow over the low-density snow sitting on the 2/1 crust was a great recipe for avalanches on its own. Throw in the switch to rain at low and mid-elevations along with high winds and precip rates, and very dangerous avalanche conditions developed across the map on Wednesday the 5th.

This is where we find ourselves on Thursday, in the middle of a notable avalanche cycle producing wet snow avalanches below the rain line with dry snow avalanches above. The way this winter has been going so far, it’s a good guess that things will continue to be fluid going forward, let’s just hope it’s a colder type of fluid.

Loose Wet avalanche activity on Snoqualmie Pass. 02/05/20. Photo: Andy Harrington

Valid until: Feb 13th, 2020 10:00AM