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RegisterFeb 25th, 2021–Feb 26th, 2021
North Columbia.
New snow and wind will mean that storm slabs are to be expected, and will likely be reactive to human triggering in many areas.
The potential exists to trigger deeper weak layers, resulting in large avalanches. Choose conservative terrain.
THURSDAY NIGHT - Flurries, 5-15 cm / moderate to strong southwest wind / alpine low temperature near -10
FRIDAY - Mainy cloudy with flurries, 5 cm / moderate northwest wind / alpine high temperature near -8
SATURDAY - A mix of sun and cloud with a few flurries / moderate west wind / alpine high temperature near -13
SUNDAY - Mainly cloudy with scattered flurries, 5 cm / strong southwest wind / alpine high temperature near -5 / freezing level 1500 m
On Wednesday there were two size 3 persistent slab avalanches reported on east to southeast aspects around treeline. These were notable as they failed on the late January persistent weak layer.
The Selkirks were the hotspot for avalanche activity over the weekend and into Monday, with widespread size 2-3 natural storm slab avalanches and size 3-4 explosives-triggered avalanches.
Reports from the Monashees indicate a natural avalanche cycle up to size 2.5 over the weekend. Explosives work on Tuesday in the northern Monashees produced limited results including a few size 1, and one size 2 cornice triggered storm slab.
5-15 cm is expected overnight on Thursday with another 5 cm on Friday. This will add to the 60-100 cm of recent storm snow. Deep wind deposits may be found in lee terrain features in the alpine and open treeline areas, and will likely remain reactive to human triggers. All of this new snow sits over weak, faceted snow from the recent cold snap.
There is now 70-120 cm of snow above the late January persistent weak layer which is composed of surface hoar in sheltered areas in the trees and/ or a crust on steep solar aspects.