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RegisterMar 19th, 2018–Mar 20th, 2018
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While avalanche conditions are slowly easing, the high consequences of Persistent Slab avalanches lurk below the surface. Watch out for shallower areas of snow and avoid large avalanche terrain. Weak layers buried deep in old snow have been responsible for fatalities and serious injuries over the past month.
Persistent Slabs avalanches are difficult to manage. They have been the cause of fatalities or serious injuries for the past month in the Cascades. The best way to stay safe is to limit your exposure to terrain that can produce large avalanches. Stay out of avalanche start zones, terrain traps, and complex terrain in large avalanche paths. Watch out for shallower areas of snow where you can still trigger these avalanches. The potential for triggering Persistent Slabs takes a long time to go away and it's easy for the message to get old. Stay vigilant and maintain a wide buffer of safety between yourself and large, complex avalanche terrain.
Until solar exposed slopes get softened by the sun they will remain hard and slick. It may be difficult to stop a fall on these slopes while they are still firm. Avoid traveling near or under areas with glide cracks and stay away from large cornices. These types of terrain could be dangerous during Tuesday's warm up.
Expect warming temperatures and sun for Tuesday. While there may be a few rollerballs in areas that received a couple inches of recent snow, Loose Wet Avalanches should not be a problem. Many sunny slopes have very hard crusts in the upper foot of the snowpack. High elevation, northerly slopes are staying soft and dry. You may see some localized drifts at upper elevations.
Below the most recent snow and crust, several older persistent weak layers continue to be reported. Persistent Slabs in the upper snowpack will be easier to trigger, but may be more isolated in their distribution. Persistent Slabs deeper in the snowpack (2/13 or 16 layer) are more widespread, but they are harder to trigger. Observations from the Eastern areas of the Cascades have found these layers reactive and 3 avalanche fatalities occurred on persistent weak layers in early March. The exact persistent weak layer depends on your location.
Commonly seen persistent weak layers are:
Observations
North
On Sunday, a guide near Washington pass reported sudden test results on the 3/8 buried surface hoar layer about 1 foot below the surface.
Central
NWAC professional observer Matt Primomo traveled in the North Fork of the Teanaway River Thursday (just north of Cle Elum). Matt found 2-4 inches of new snow over a generally supportable crust. The 3/8 buried surface hoard was found about 12 inches below the snow surface. It was reactive in some snowpack tests. The 2/5 layer was also found in this area about 3 feet below the snow surface.