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RegisterMar 22nd, 2026–Mar 24th, 2026
Kananaskis, Bow Valley, Highwood Pass, North 40, Spray - KLakes.
With the cooler temperatures and previous widespread natural avalanche cycle, there is still the potential for avalanches to occur with human triggering, especially in the alpine where the rain crust doesn't exist.
No avalanches reported & no road patrol today
The recent widespread historical avalanche cycle is beginning to slow down but it hasn't ended just yet. Recent wind slabs on Saturday were still failing in alpine areas as the winds increased throughout the day.
The majority of recent avalanche activity looks to be initiated by Wind/Storm slabs in the alpine then pulling out a wet slab around 2400m that ran on possibly the Jan 27th SH/FC interface.
Temperatures went below freezing on Sunday and as a result there was a 5cm thick supportive crust in the valley floors. Under this crust, the snowpack is generally wet and isothermal to ground up to around 2400m. The cooler temperatures will take a few days to penetrate the snowpack here.
Above 2400m the recent precipitation mainly fell as snow and there is up to 50cm of snow that as of Sunday being redistributed by moderate westerly winds forming new wind slabs in the upper elevations.
Monday: Cloudy morning will part to mostly sunny skies in the afternoon. A night time low of -8 & a day time high of -2. Moderate Sw winds at ridgetop. Freezing levels could rise to 1800m by afternoon.
More details can be found in the Mountain Weather Forecast.