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RegisterMar 10th, 2016–Mar 11th, 2016
Olympics.
Wind slabs and cornices along ridges should be less sensitive Friday but still capable of producing large avalanches near and above treeline. The loose wet potential should be relegated to steeper slopes primarily below treeline but will have the potential to entrain heavy wet snow. Avoid terrain traps where even a small yet heavy loose wet avalanche would have serious consequences. You may not see natural avalanche activity Friday, but the human triggered potential remains elevated.
Clouds should spread over the Olympics Friday as moisture rotates northward and a weak frontal band offshore approaches. Very light precipitation should develop during the afternoon hours. Snow levels should remain moderate Friday, rising along with daytime warming.
All the travel advice associated with Considerable danger will be pertinent on Friday. Strong winds that loaded slopes Wednesday night and Thursday will require cautious route-finding and conservative terrain selection Friday. Wind slabs and cornices along ridges should be less sensitive Friday but still capable of producing large avalanches in specific areas near and above treeline.
The loose wet potential should be relegated to steeper slopes primarily below treeline Friday but will have the potential to entrain heavy wet snow. Avoid terrain traps where even a small yet heavy loose wet avalanche would have serious consequences. There continues to be a lot of water in our snowpack, so don't underestimate loose wet avalanches in the wrong terrain.
Weather and Snowpack
The nonstop active weather pattern continues to push a storm system through the PNW almost every day or two with fluctuating but generally moderate snow levels. The last storm impacted the area Wednesday through Thursday with a warming trend that peaked Wednesday night with the frontal passage in the early morning hours and also featured very strong winds. Winds decreased Thursday afternoon along with decreasing shower activity. Generally 1.5 to 3 inches of water accumulated along the west slopes in the 36 hours ending 4 pm Thursday. Similar amounts were likely seen at Hurricane Ridge. The Waterhole NRCS snowdepth has stayed steady over the last few days due to the alternating periods of rain and snow.
The mid and lower snow pack in the Olympics should generally be a stable mix of crusts and layers of moist and rounded snow crystals.
Recent Observations
The ranger at Hurricane reported a foot of new snow on Monday morning with snow sliding off the road cuts and onto the road in many places. The Sunrise path on a northeast slope about a 1/2 mile from the visitor center released an avalanche that entrained snow to about 1' and became 100 feet wide although it could not be determined if it was a loose or slab avalanches due to low visibility.
On Tuesday the ranger added that there had been many 6-12 inch storm slab avalanches on Monday.
No observations were received Wednesday or Thursday, March 9-10th.
Hurricane Weather Station
Internet communications to the station have been disrupted at the NWAC office. We have identified the problem but unfortunately our hardware will not be repaired until early next week. We apologize for the outage and are working to get the station back up ASAP.