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RegisterJan 25th, 2016–Jan 26th, 2016
Olympics.
It looks like a mild wet day in the Olympics on Tuesday. Watch for wet surface snow deeper than a few inches and pinwheels or roller balls that usually precede loose wet avalanches.
Light to moderate rain or snow with pretty high snow levels should seen in most of the Olympics and Cascades Tuesday.
In the Olympics the main problem should be loose wet avalanches on Tuesday. Watch for wet surface snow deeper than a few inches and pinwheels or roller balls that usually precede loose wet avalanches. This may be most likely on non solar slopes holding loose snow but will be indicated on all aspects.
Previous wind slab mainly in the above treeline may be loaded and weakened by rain or wet snow. This should be mainly on northwest to southeast aspects.
A warm front last Thursday caused heavy rain in the Olympics and this caused a loose wet avalanche cycle on steep slopes in all the elevation bands.
This was followed by cooler weather and some snow. The cooling formed good bonding to the forming crust as observed by NWAC pro-observer Matt Schonwald Friday.
Matt reported generally stable surface snow conditions with no layers of concern in the BTL and NTL elevation zones. Overall the snowpack consisted of a few inches of saturated snow, well bonded to supportive dryer, old snow and a newly forming crust. Stability tests were all negative. Some transport of loose surface snow was seen being deposited on the northerly facing terrain below ridges, but no distinctive wind slab had formed as of Friday afternoon.
Hurricane Ridge weather station: NWAC forecaster Garth Ferber was at Hurricane Ridge Thursday and with the help of NPS IT staff our weather station is back online! We appreciate everyone's patience and the new internet connection to the weather station should be more reliable than the previous aging microwave system.