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RegisterApr 22nd, 2017–Apr 23rd, 2017
Mt Hood.
New wind slabs may build above treeline, mainly below ridges. Loose wet avalanches are less likely Sunday, except at the lowest elevations below treeline. Cornices are large, so give them a wide safety margin.
Cooling with diminishing showers and some partial clearing overnight Saturday and early Sunday should allow for surface snow to partially or completely refreeze and strengthen. This should allow for a brief decrease in avalanche danger through early Sunday.
Another frontal system will lift over the area from south to north Sunday, followed by post-frontal showers late Sunday. Rain should generally be seen below 4500 feet. Light to moderate amounts of new snow should accumulate above 4500 feet Sunday. Above treeline, areas of shallow new wind slabs may develop on lee aspects.
Due to cooling by Sunday, loose wet avalanches should be less likely to initiate, except in the lower elevations below treeline where shallow wet snow is expected.
Cornices are still large, so give them a wide safety margin. Natural cornice releases and resulting slab avalanches are dangerous and unpredictable. Give cornices a wide berth if traveling along ridge-lines and avoid slopes below large cornices. See a blog post regarding cornices here.
Avoid unsupported slopes with overhanging blocks of snow and smooth rock underneath. Glide avalanches can release at any time, not just during the heat of the day, and are by definition difficult to predict and manage.
The active weather pattern continues into late April in the Pacific Northwest despite what the calendar says. Between Monday and Thursday night, Mt. Hood stations picked up 1.5 - 2 inches of water equivalent (WE). Much or all of this fell as snow above 5500-6000 feet. Moderate W-SW transport winds have occurred near and above treeline over this stretch as well. Natural loose wet avalanches likely occurred throughout this period as the snow-line oscillated or on solar aspects at lower elevations during sunbreaks.
Friday was a warm day with most NWAC stations in the Olympics and Cascades reaching into the 40s and 50s.
A renewed active weather pattern Saturday brought periods of light rain and snow showers through the day, with a slow cooling trend. These were mainly rain showers below about 5500 feet.
Recent observations
Laura Green checked in from the Mt. Hood Meadows pro-patrol Friday. During morning avalanche control work with explosives, wind slabs were not widespread, but propagating well on lee NE - ESE aspects between 6600 and 7800 feet. Crowns were up to 2 feet deep. Recent and natural wind slab avalanches had occurred in White River Canyon on similar aspects and elevations.