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RegisterDec 15th, 2018–Dec 16th, 2018
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Very dangerous avalanche conditions continue. Heavy snow, rain, and wind on Sunday will cause natural avalanches. Avoid travel in avalanche terrain.
Reports of natural and triggered avalanches continue in the Mt. Baker area. Clearing skies on Saturday allowed observers to view evidence of a unique and impressive avalanche cycle. Numerous avalanches were very large and destructive (some could destroy a house). Several ran full track to valley bottom. The majority of avalanches failed on a weak layer (surface hoar and/or facets) buried 4-6ft deep. Over the past 6 days, Mt. Baker has received over 9” of water translating into several feet of new snow. More precipitation in the forecast will continue to overload our fragile and scary snowpack.
We made it through our first strong winter storm and are headed into a weekend with dangerous and fickle avalanche conditions. Thick slabs of new snow (2-5 feet) are perched above a weak layer of faceted crystals. Avalanches triggered on this layer could be very large and life-threatening.
Reports continue to come in of very large natural and explosives triggered avalanches in the northern and eastern zones. For perspective, several of these slides have been classified as D3, or large enough to destroy a house.
Anyone accessing alpine areas should limit their exposure to areas where avalanches start, run and stop. In some places, the weak snow will talk to you by whumpfing and cracking. In other places, the heavy blanket of new snow is thick enough that it can give a false sense of stability while it masks the dangerous layering below.
Approximate snow totals from 12/10 - 12/14:
Mt. Baker: 55”
Washington Pass: 29”
Stevens Pass: 37”
Snoqualmie Pass: 28”
Paradise: 38”
Mt. Hood Meadows: 13”
Olympics: mostly rain
The change in the snowpack is pretty dramatic with elevation. The height of snow decreases rapidly below 4500’ at Baker and Washington Pass, 5500’ at Crystal/Rainier. The Passes have better low elevation coverage, but it's still pretty thin below 4000’. With additional warm storms in the forecast, this pattern is expected to continue for a while.
Be cautious and get home safe.