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RegisterMar 21st, 2021–Mar 22nd, 2021
South Columbia.
Carefully assess your line for reactive wind slabs before committing. Steep, convex slopes below ridgetop are the most likely places to trigger these slabs.
SUNDAY NIGHT: Snow and flurries, most areas should see 10-15 cm however localized enhancement may produce up to 25 cm in isolated areas. Moderate southwest wind, alpine low -6C, and freezing level near 1000 m.
MONDAY: Cloudy with sunny breaks and isolated flurries, up to 10 cm of snow possible. Moderate northwest wind, alpine high -4C, and freezing level rising above 1300 m.
TUESDAY: Mostly sunny with patchy clouds. Light to moderate southwest wind, alpine high +1C, and freezing level beginning near valley bottom rising above 1500 m.
WEDNESDAY: Snow, 10-20 cm. Light west wind, alpine high -1C, and rising to 1500 m.
On Sunday, explosives and skier traffic triggered numerous size 1 avalanches, new and touchy cornices were observed. A few small dry loose avalanches and sluffing in steep terrain was also reported.
On Saturday, explosives triggered small (size 1-1.5) storm slabs from north-northeast aspects above 2000 m. A skier also triggered a small (size 1) wind slab on a steep convex roll on an easterly aspect at treeline. Sluffing was reported in steep terrain. In Glacier NP, a handful of storm slabs size 1.5-2.5 released naturally from steep north-northwest aspects above 2000m.
On Friday, several glide slab avalanches (size 2-3) were observed on south and east aspects around the TCH highway corridor. Loose wet avalanches up to size 2.5 were reported around the region; a natural loose-wet cycle was reported around Rogers Pass initiating with evening rainfall.
On Thursday several loose wet avalanches to size two were reported on solar alpine features. Pin wheeling was also noted on north aspects below 2000 m in the afternoon.
On Wednesday a few loose-wet avalanches were seen on steep solar aspects below treeline.
On Tuesday, a natural 1.5 loose wet avalanche was reported from steep rocky terrain and small loose-dry sluffs were easily triggered by skier traffic on northerly aspects.
Southwesterly winds have developed slabs in lee features. 25-35 cm storm snow covers a handful of surfaces: dry settled snow and surface hoar (up to 10 mm) on northerly aspects above 1800m, and crusts on solar aspects and lower elevations. Large cornices loom over alpine ridgetops. Below 1500 m, the snowpack turns moist.
Persistent weak layers of surface hoar, crusts, and/or facets 80-120 cm down have recently been unreactive and no recent avalanches have been reported on these layers.