Avalanche Forecast

Issued: Mar 7th, 2019 10:17AM

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

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Expect recent shallow wind slabs in higher terrain below ridges Friday. If you see evidence of wind affected snow, steer away from features where you are more likely to trigger an avalanche such as convex rollovers, unsupported slopes, or complex terrain. Persistent slabs may linger in areas with a shallower snowpack. Collapses or whumpfs are clear signs to avoid steep terrain.

Summary

Discussion

Snow and Avalanche Discussion

While weather stations indicate several inches or less of storm snow in the last 24 hours, expect isolated areas where heavier showers bring higher accumulations. In such areas, note the underlying snow surface which may be a mix of surface hoar or weak sugary facets on north-facing aspects and crusts on south-facing aspects, with wind-affected firmer snow at higher elevations. If you find such areas (particularly closer to the Cascade Crest), storm slabs could be in your area, so mitigate your hazard by choosing terrain under 35 degrees away from terrain traps.

Observe where winds are transporting snow and buildings drifts and slabs, likely near and above treeline. Approach steep unsupported slopes with wind-drifted snow cautiously, feeling for firm or hollow sounding snow as a sign that wind slabs may be present. You can stay safe by traveling on ridges, wind-scoured areas and any slope less than 35 degrees.

In shallower snowpack areas, you are more likely to find and potentially trigger persistent slab avalanches within the top 1 or 2 feet of the snowpack. Terrain management is key. Choose low angle and well-supported slopes. Avoid shallow rocky zones, convex rolls, cross-loaded gullies, and very steep, extreme terrain. Travel one at a time from well defined safe zones when moving through avalanche terrain. Look for obvious signs of instability such as cracking and collapsing.

Closer to White Pass where the snowpack is deeper, the potential for a deep persistent slab avalanche several feet deep continues. While there haven't been any large avalanches releasing this deep near the western edge of the zone in two weeks, this low-likelihood - high consequence avalanche problem should continue to shape your terrain selection.

Forecast Schedule and No Rating

At this time, we do not have enough specific snowpack information to issue an avalanche hazard rating for the East Slopes South zone. However, even when No Rating is applied, applicable avalanche conditions and backcountry travel advice will be provided throughout the season. When weather systems produce very dangerous avalanche conditions in adjacent zones, NWAC will issue an avalanche warning for this zone as well.

Snowpack Discussion

March 4, 2019

Here we are at the beginning of March. The days are noticeably longer, the sun feels warmer, but the winter is far from over. This may be a good time to take stock of February’s events, where we are now, and what we might expect in the future.

A February to Remember

Many longtime Cascade travelers continue to remark about the long span of high-quality travel conditions in February. Indeed, we’ve experienced three weeks of very cold and snowy conditions. Backcountry travelers frequently reported, “best conditions in years”. February also saw a few rounds of natural and human triggered avalanches. These avalanches were different from our more frequent Cascade storm slabs; here today and gone tomorrow. Most avalanches failed on buried weak persistent layers. As such, most zones spent much of February with Persistent or Deep Persistent Slabs in their forecasts.

Natural avalanche in Icicle Creek Feb 13, 2019. Photo: Matt Primomo

With the notable absence of high elevation rain events, snowpacks around the northwest grew remarkably. On the west slope, most weather stations added 2-4 ft of snow depth. East-side locations added 1-2 ft. Mt Hood locations added 4-5 ft. Even with these impressive snowpack growths, many Cascade Snotel sites are recording near or just below average snow depths for the winter.  

During most of February, snow conditions were soft and powdery making for fun recreating in many areas. Photo Matt Primomo.

Where We Are Now

Lack of avalanche activity on the layer of buried facets from Feb 8 allows us to gain confidence in many areas. In many areas, there has been a lack of avalanche activity and snowpack tests have been less reactive. These two pieces combined have allowed us to drop persistent slabs from some forecasts and shift others to “unlikely.” The exception is the East Cascades where a shallow snowpack has preserved buried facets, and persistent slabs will remain possible until the sensitivity drops further. So, we’re out to the woods, right? Well, maybe. The same cold and stormy weather that brought us excellent snow quality, also allowed us to bury new weak layers. So far we haven’t confirmed any avalanches on these shallow weak layers, but they have our attention and we’re tracking them.

Recently our attention shifted to the upper snowpack. Recent avalanche problems have largely focussed on wind transported snow. Several wind events, predominantly from the east, placed wind slabs on a variety of aspect. With the colder than normal temperatures, wind slabs may not heal as quickly as normal.

A small natural wind slab avalanche in the Crystal Mt backcountry. Photo; Dallas Glass

What Might We Expect

As we move into March, it’s anyone’s guess what specific weather patterns lay in store of us. However, there are two items that stick out in our minds.

  • The strength of the March sun: You can already feel it just walking around town. As the sun creeps higher into the sky and the days grow longer, the sun can have a greater impact on the snow surface. When the sun comes out, expect things to change quickly. You may see avalanches conditions change with natural loose avalanches originating from sunny slopes, surface snow becoming thick and heavy, and slabs taking on a moist to wet snow character. 

  • High elevation travel: Frequently March begins to usher in a period where we push higher and deeper into the mountains. Remember, we don’t have as much information about these far-flung locations. If you use the longer days of March to travel to bigger objectives, keep your eyes open. When observations don’t line-up with the avalanche advisory, you may be experiencing a different snowpack. It’s times like these we need to stop and reevaluate.

Mt Baker on a nice day in early February. Photo: Lee Lazzara

February was amazing! but March is here… there’s still plenty of winter left. Stay safe out there.

Valid until: Mar 8th, 2019 10:17AM