Avalanche Forecast

Issued: Dec 19th, 2019 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

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New snow, strong winds and rising temperatures are a recipe for avalanches. Avoid travel in avalanche terrain.

Summary

Discussion

As freezing levels rise tonight and precipitation continues, natural and human triggered avalanches are likely. Expect fresh wind slabs at upper elevations and wet avalanches at lower elevations. 

Rising temperatures Thursday evening will increase avalanche danger through Friday.

Storm totals so far are around 5”. This snow was accompanied by strong winds, especially at upper elevations. At lower elevations, a change to mixed precipitation and rain will happen Thursday night. Strong upper elevation winds and mixed precipitation at lower elevations will continue Friday.

Snow cover is still low, and small avalanches can still be dangerous with new snow hiding rocks and stumps.

 

If you travel in the backcountry of the East South zone, submit an observation!

Forecast Schedule and No Rating definition

At this time, 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. When weather systems produce very dangerous avalanche conditions in adjacent zones, NWAC will issue an avalanche warning for this zone as well.

Snowpack Discussion

December 19th, 2019 (The regional synopsis is updated every Thursday @ 6 pm)

Let’s take a moment to recap what happened over the past week:

A potent winter storm arrived on the 12th, adding to the very shallow snowpack throughout the region. Anywhere from 6-36” of snow fell between the 11th and 15th. Places like Mt Baker, Paradise, Mt Hood, and White Pass were the winners regarding snowfall, with quite a bit less for areas further east of the crest like Mission Ridge, Blewett Pass, and Washington Pass. 

The most notable avalanche activity occurred in the Mt. Baker backcountry where numerous human triggered storm slab avalanches occurred (with several big enough to injure, bury, or kill a person). The majority of these occurred on upper elevation, north and east facing terrain. Besides the danger posed by the size of the avalanche, many slides quickly revealed rocks and other obstacles barely hidden below the snow surface. 

The storm layer took time bond with the underlying snow surface, and we saw the likelihood of triggering slab avalanches slowly decrease over a handful of days. The avalanche danger was at Considerable for many places on Saturday the 14th, then tapered to Moderate on Sunday, and eventually reached Low in many places by Tuesday and Wednesday. 

A large, human triggered avalanche on the old snow interface. East aspect of Table Mountain (West-North Zone) at 5,500ft. December 15,2019. Photo by Brooks Broom. 

Backcountry travelers have noted generally thin and shallow snowpacks, with a range of structures across the region. Many folks were skeptical of the layering they found. People were able to dig down and observe weak layers in many areas. These were buried in late November and early December. In some places they presented as weak snow over a crust, in others, a layer of feather-like surface hoar. Cold temperatures have likely preserved many of these layers, and will be worth considering as the snow piles up.

Below is a list of commonly visited locations and their snowpack depths in inches (as of December 19th at 4am). Check the weather station hourly data feed and watch as the subtropical javelin of moisture (also known as a strong atmospheric river) changes conditions dramatically over the next few days. 

Total Snow Depth in Inches as of December 19th at 04:00 AM.

-Matt Primomo

Valid until: Dec 20th, 2019 10:00AM