Avalanche Forecast

Issued: Feb 23rd, 2019 10:00AM

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

Northwest Avalanche Center NWAC, Northwest Avalanche Center

Even though the danger is dropping, you may still find wind slabs especially at higher elevations and in more complex terrain. Keep your eyes open for places where the wind transported the recent snow. Steer around open slopes greater than 35 degrees where you suspect the wind deposited snow.

Summary

Discussion

Snow and Avalanche Discussion

We have not received any reports of notable avalanches around the West-North region in several days. While the recent storm brought us a nice shot of snow, the main story continues to be the winds. With such light, dry snow the winds don’t need to be very strong to drift the snow into slabs.

There are a few layers worth keeping on your mind in the upper snowpack. Both are layers of buried surface hoar down 12 and 18 inches respectively. Surface hoard can be very spotty, so you may not find it everywhere. So far we don’t have any reported avalanches on these layers, but that may be due to a lack of a slab. As the snow settles that could change.

As the sun pops out on Sunday, keep a lookout for loose avalanches occurring on steep sunny slopes. Don’t linger below these slopes during periods of prolonged sunshine, and be leery of traveling around confining gullies where even small loose avalanches can bury you deeply.

Snowpack Discussion

February 19th, 2019

Recap

We’re now over a week out from a major winter storm and avalanche cycle that left a string of school cancellations and avalanche near misses in its wake. As with snowfall amounts, the avalanche cycles have been similar, but not identical in all regions. The further we’re getting from the peak of the cycle, the more variation in avalanche conditions we’re seeing between regions and even within individual zones. Variable snow totals from storms this week are further adding to the range of conditions you will encounter. In some places, these storms may add stress to existing weak layers.

In the days after the natural cycle, it was obvious that you could trigger an avalanche. Large crowns were visible and you could feel and hear collapses in many zones. Managing your risk was easy. Avoid avalanche terrain. Since the natural avalanche cycle quieted down, the main concern for avalanches has focussed on the February 8th facets in regions where the weak layer is problematic.

A natural persistent slab (D2) on a north aspect at 4200 ft low in Glacier Creek drainage (Hwy 542). 02/13/19 Lee Lazzara Photo

Variability and Mixed Messages

As the time moves on and the snowpack structure changes, we’re seeing the potential for triggering avalanches change as well. The February 8th layer is rounding (strengthening) and the likelihood of triggering an avalanche on it is decreasing. So much so that the problem is trending to unlikely in some regions. Unfortunately, the consequences (size and destructive potential) remain the same if you do trigger an avalanche on this layer.

These conditions are commonly described as "low probability - high consequence" scenarios. Under these circumstances, common clues may paint a conflicting picture and snowpack tests become even more difficult to interpret (snowpack tests often don’t give us a clear “go or no-go” answer, if such a thing exists).

Q: How do we manage our risk when observations are contradictory and difficult to interpret?

A: When avalanche conditions are complicated, defer to less consequential and simpler. Prioritize obvious clues, like recent avalanches, shooting cracks, or collapses. Focus on other observations that indicate a potential to trigger avalanches. Snowpack tests are just one piece of the decision-making puzzle. Lean on them as reasons to reduce your groups' exposure to avalanche terrain. Don’t use them to justify traveling in more consequential terrain.

A natural persistent slab avalanche (D2), likely occurred on 2/12 on southwest through southeast aspects of Windy Mountain at 5,400ft in the Tye River drainage. Photo: Dan Veenhuizen.

Case Study

On the 17th I dug a profile, east of Stevens Pass on a north-northeast aspect at 4,127ft. I found the February 8th facets (0.5-1.5mm) rounding and buried 59cm from the surface. After much investigation, I found the following results at the February 8th interface: CTH (SP), ECTN28, PST 45/100 (END), 5 yellow flags (structural indicators). Later that day, about 2000 linear feet away from the profile site at the same elevation and slightly different aspect, we experienced a massive rumbling collapse.

All this crypto snow-speak means that some of the observations I made indicated that triggering an avalanche was likely, but some did not. Depending on your interpretation, some results could be argued either way. Confusing, right?

With all of this data in my field book, it was the collapse that stuck out. It was enough evidence for me to avoid slopes steeper than 35 degrees. That was a more obvious answer than all the other data I gathered and it’s the easiest to interpret. Without the collapse, I would have prioritized the test results that indicated I could have triggered a slide.

Problems

Wind Slabs

An icon showing Wind Slabs

Several wind events over the last couple of days likely formed shallow wind slabs on a variety of aspects. You are most likely to encounter wind drifted snow at higher elevations and in more complex terrain. You can look for signs such as uneven snow surfaces, fresh cornices, and snow drifts to highlight locations where the wind transported snow. In these areas, steer around wind loaded slopes greater than 35 degrees where you may trigger a wind slab avalanche. In terrain near treeline, you could encounter old wind slabs sitting on the surface hoard mentioned in the discussion. While this slab/weak-layer set-up is probably isolated, it should be on your mind if you are traveling in this elevation band.

Release of a cohesive layer of snow (a slab) formed by the wind. Wind typically transports snow from the upwind sides of terrain features and deposits snow on the downwind side. Wind slabs are often smooth and rounded and sometimes sound hollow, and can range from soft to hard. Wind slabs that form over a persistent weak layer (surface hoar, depth hoar, or near-surface facets) may be termed Persistent Slabs or may develop into Persistent Slabs.

 

Wind Slabs form in specific areas, and are confined to lee and cross-loaded terrain features. They can be avoided by sticking to sheltered or wind-scoured areas..

 

Wind Slab avalanche. Winds blew from left to right. The area above the ridge has been scoured, and the snow drifted into a wind slab on the slope below.

 

Wind slabs can take up to a week to stabilize. They are confined to lee and cross-loaded terrain features and can be avoided by sticking to sheltered or wind scoured areas.

Aspects: All aspects.

Elevations: Alpine, Treeline.

Likelihood

Possible

Expected Size

1 - 1

Persistent Slabs

An icon showing Persistent Slabs

The persistent slab we’ve been dealing with for a few weeks has been pretty quiet in the West-North. That’s great news and causing us to gain confidence. That doesn’t mean it’s totally gone. Critical observations from other zones such as skier triggered avalanches and collapses, are keep this potentially dangerous layer on our mind. Remember, you may not find obvious signs of unstable snow. The only way to observe this persistent layer is to dig. Snow profiles and snowpack tests may reveal a layer of buried surface hoar and/or facets 3-4 feet below the snow surface. If you suspect this layer is present, its best to simply avoid large open slopes greater than 35 degrees.

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

Unlikely

Expected Size

1 - 1

Valid until: Feb 24th, 2019 10:00AM