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RegisterFeb 7th, 2023–Feb 8th, 2023
South Coast, North Shore, Sasquatch, Sky Pilot, Tetrahedron.
***UPDATED***
Expect reactive storm slabs and be cautious of loose wet avalanches at lower elevations.
Watch for instability as you transition in exposed terrain as you seek out the best snow above the rain-snow line.
No new avalanche activity reported in the last 36 hours.
A large storm slab avalanche was reported on the 5th in the Tetrahedron. We anticipate more of these types of avalanches are likely to occur due to this last storm.
There is potential for deep storm slabs and wind slabs to slide on a buried crust, producing large and destructive avalanches.
Please continue to post your reports and photos to the Mountain Information Network, the information is very helpful to forecasters.
Moderate southerly winds will have redistributed 40 to 50 cm of recent storm snow creating wind slabs in the immediate lee of features. A hard crust can now be found in sheltered, approximately 60 to 80 cm deep. Snowpack tests have shown a poor bond between the crust and overlying snow. The middle and lower snowpack is strong and bonded.
Tuesday Night
Cloudy, snow ending in the day with trace accumulation overnight, wind southwest 35 to 40 km/h, treeline temperatures -5 C.
Wednesday
Mainly sunny, no accumulation, wind southwest 10 to 20 km/h, treeline temperatures -5 C.
Thursday
Cloudy, 30 to 15 cm accumulation at higher elevations over the 24-hour period rain below 1400 m, wind southerly 50 km/h gusting to 75, treeline temperatures at 1 C.
Friday
Cloudy, up to 20 cm accumulation at a higher elevation with rain below 700 m, wind southerly 35 km/h, treeline temperatures -4 C.
More details can be found in the Mountain Weather Forecast.