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Avalanche Forecast

Archived

Jan 26th, 2014–Jan 27th, 2014

Alpine
Natural avalanches unlikely, human triggered possible.
Treeline
Natural avalanches unlikely.
Below Treeline
Natural avalanches unlikely.
Alpine
Natural avalanches unlikely, human triggered possible.
Treeline
Natural avalanches unlikely.
Below Treeline
Natural avalanches unlikely.
Alpine
Natural avalanches unlikely.
Treeline
Natural avalanches unlikely.
Below Treeline
Natural avalanches unlikely.

Regions

Glacier.

Weather Forecast

The high pressure ridge that has long since over stayed its welcome over the interior is finally starting to breakdown. It will hang in there until wednesday when a weak system will head our way bringing light amounts of snow. Until then the north west flow will have temperatures cooling, the inversion will dissipate with dry clear conditions.

Snowpack Summary

New sun crust on south and west aspects. On north and east slopes 5 to 10cm of light snow sits on a myriad of surfaces. Below 2000m it buried a surface hoar layer and from tree line to the alpine it sits over a hard wind slab. The mid-pack is well settled with no significant shears in the upper 1m, the basal layers are showing a weaker structure.

Avalanche Summary

We had a vague report of a skier triggered avalanche at the entrance to 8812 bowl from Bruins Pass, size 1.5 at 15:30 on Jan 24, with no other details. Numerous loose naturals up to size 2.5 were observed from that afternoon and yesterday throughout the backcountry in the recent storm snow. All originated from steep south and west slopes.

Confidence

Problems

Loose Wet

Loose Wet avalanches are the release of wet unconsolidated snow or slush. These avalanches typically occur within layers of wet snow near the surface of the snowpack, but they may quickly gouge into lower snowpack layers. Like Loose Dry Avalanches, they start at a point and entrain snow as they move downhill, forming a fan-shaped avalanche. Other names for loose-wet avalanches include point-release avalanches or sluffs. Loose Wet avalanches can trigger slab avalanches that break into deeper snow layers.

Persistent Slabs

Persistent Slab avalanches are the release of a cohesive layer of 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 Slab.