Avalanche Forecast

Issued: Jan 29th, 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

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Pay attention to changing conditions as you ascend in elevation.  Watch for loose wet avalanches on very steep sunny slopes at lower and mid elevations. Steer around steep slopes with fresh wind drifted snow at upper elevations.

Summary

Discussion

A frontal system produced strong winds above treeline along with a rising snowline and light to moderate precipitation on Wednesday. With limited observations from area Snotels, the rain-line likely pushed above 5500’ during the daylight hours. 

For Thursday, it’s above 6000’ and on steep lee slopes that you may find recently formed wind slabs. While the chances of triggering a wind slab avalanche should be trending down, continue to use caution around steep slopes with freshly wind-drifted snow. If you suspect wind slabs are present, you can travel safely by sticking to ridgelines, scoured windward slopes or by choosing lower angled terrain. With temperatures on the rise, give recently formed cornices a wide berth while traveling along ridgelines. 

The loose wet avalanche hazard should also be trending down on Thursday. Loose avalanches may release naturally below rocky outcrops or you may trigger one on very steep sunny slopes. Remember that loose wet avalanches are often surprisingly powerful and even small loose wet avalanches can be dangerous when combined with terrain traps like gullies, cliff bands, or open creeks.

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

Update: January 24th 2020 (The regional synopsis is updated every Thursday @ 6 pm)

During the afternoon of January 23, 2020 one person was buried and killed by an avalanche that released from the roof of a home north of Blewett Pass near Highway 97. The elevation was approximately 1,700ft above sea level. She was found underneath 4 to 5ft of debris. She was discovered and excavated some time after the accident, where CPR was performed. Additional emergency response arrived within 15 minutes, but they were unable to revive her.

Our deepest condolences go out to the family and friends of the victim.

January to Remember

A parade of storms since the New Year began brought relentless precipitation, and impressive snowpack growth throughout the region. Areas along the west slopes of the Cascades have rarely gone more than 24-48hrs without precipitation. In the past three weeks, the Volcanoes and Passes received 20-28in of water equivalent, translating into incredible snowfall totals - Mt. Baker Ski Area reported 240in of new snow since January 1. The majority of NWAC weather station sites are reporting snow depths well over 120% of normal for this time of year. Ongoing precipitation and fluctuating snow levels have maintained elevated avalanche danger throughout the month, with avalanche warnings issued for nearly all forecast zones on 4 separate days (January 6, 7, 12, 23).  

Snow depth imagery for the Northwest Region on January 23, 2020. Many areas in the Cascades and Olympics show well over 100 inches of snow on the ground. Image courtesy of NOHRSC Regional Snow Analysis

Location

January 1-23 Precipitation (Water Equivalent)

Hurricane Ridge

14.79”

Mt Baker Ski Area

28.65”

Harts Pass

11.2”

Stevens Pass

20.26”

Leavenworth

4.01”

Snoqualmie Pass

25.43”

Paradise, Mt Rainier

24.13”

Mt Hood Meadows

22.34”

Table 1: Precipitation totals for select weather stations January 1-23, 2020. Huge numbers at Baker, Rainier, Hood, and the Passes and there is still another week left this month.

MLK Weekend and a Pattern of Rain on Dry Snow

After a prolonged cold period with arctic air and lowland snow, MLK weekend brought unseasonably warm temperatures and a rapid thaw. High snow levels and rain caused wet avalanche activity throughout the region January 18-19. A few very large natural avalanches occurred at upper elevations where all precipitation fell as snow. A cooling trend followed, creating a pronounced crust that is now buried in almost all forecast zones. Cold, dry snow January 21-22 was followed by a rapid warm-up and the most significant rain on snow event yet, causing avalanche warnings on January 23 for 5 of our 10 forecast zones.

The crown of a very large avalanche around 10,000ft on the Newton Headwall of Mt Hood which likely occurred during the storm late last week. 01/19/20 Photo: Kevin Kayl

The buried MLK crust is widespread throughout the region and a prominent marker in the snowpack. Crystal Backcountry 01/20/20 Photo Jeremy Allyn

One More Week To Go

January isn’t over yet, and the long term forecast continues to show an active and wet weather pattern for the Northwest. The low-snow, drought-like conditions of the early season seem like a distant memory at this point. We’ve certainly made up for lost time in 2020, and this already impressive month looks to end with a bang.

Valid until: Jan 30th, 2020 10:00AM