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RegisterMar 5th, 2022–Mar 6th, 2022
Purcells.
The snowpack varies across the region, so start with conservative terrain choices, and watch for signs of instability like recent avalanches, shooting cracks or whumpfs.
Don't let the sun lure you into big features if it's not appropriate for your local conditions.
Saturday Night: Mostly clear. No new snow expected. Light north ridgetop winds, trending to moderate in the higher alpine. Freezing level falling to valley bottom, alpine low around -10 °C.
Sunday: Sunny. No new snow expected. Light north ridgetop winds, trending to moderate in the higher alpine. Freezing level at valley bottom overnight, rising to 1500 m through the day. Alpine high around -5 °C.
Monday: Partly cloudy. 0-5 cm of snow expected. Light west ridgetop wind trending to strong northwest in the higher alpine. Freezing level at valley bottom overnight, rising to 1500 m through the day.
Tuesday: Partly cloudy. 0-5 cm of snow expected overnight, and another 0-5 through the day. Light east wind. Freezing level falling to valley bottom. Alpine temperatures around -15 °C.
On Saturday, near Golden, a naturally triggered size 2 slab avalanche was reported in an open feature around treeline on an east aspect. More details here. West of Invermere, several dry loose avalanches to size 1.5 were reported out of steep, alpine terrain.
On Friday, west of Invermere, a few small, rider triggered storm slab avalanches were reported. A couple failed on a crust on a southwest aspect in the alpine, and the larger two were below treeline on a northwest aspect. Also, near Golden, numerous, small, natural and rider triggered loose dry avalanches were reported, and a size 1.5 avalanche was remotely triggered by a rider in the backcountry near Kicking Horse. More details here.
South of Golden, evidence of a widespread. loose dry and storm slab avalanche cycle during the recent storm up to size 2 was reported. Additionally, avalanche control using large explosives produced several large to very large avalanches, mostly on northerly aspects in the alpine, including one size 3.5 with a crown 60-200 cm deep that is suspected to have failed on a persistent weak layer.
Watch for the sun heating up the surface snow on steep solar aspects, and increasing the reactivity of settling storm slabs.
Snowfall amounts have varied substantially throughout the region the last few days, with Panorama and Fairmont being the benefactors of 15 cm of bonus snow on Thursday night. The end of storm totals have ended up fairly similar for most of the region. Winds have been light the last few days, leaving 35-50 cm of unconsolidated snow that is starting to settle, overlying a variety of old surfaces such as firm wind-pressed snow, sun crust on solar aspects, surface hoar, and potential cold weak crystals on shaded aspects. A melt freeze crust may exist within this storm snow, up to 1700 m on all aspects.
An interface from mid-February is likely now down 40-60 cm. This layer was previously only reactive in wind-loaded terrain where a slab had formed but may become more problematic if covered with a more widespread cohesive slab.
Below that on sheltered north aspects, there is still a surface hoar layer being tracked that was formed in late January. Though there haven't been reports of recent avalanches on this layer in this region, it is still on the radar of many operations.