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RegisterMar 29th, 2017–Mar 30th, 2017
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Fresh storm and wind slab formed Wednesday night should generally be shallow and found near and above treeline on Thursday. If previously wet surface snow has not refrozen, be suspicious of loose wet avalanches that may begin small but entrain older snow and become dangerous and difficult to manage. Sunshine on Thursday will likely activate loose wet slides on solar slopes.
Fresh storm and wind slab formed Wednesday night should generally be shallow and found near and above treeline. Due to the cooling trend, only wind slab will be listed in the avalanche problem set and emphasized above treeline. W-SW winds should have primarily built fresh wind slab on NW-SE aspects.
Despite the cooler snow levels forecast for Thursday, if previously wet surface snow has not refrozen, be suspicious of loose wet avalanches that may begin small but entrain older snow and become dangerous and difficult to manage. Sunshine on Thursday will likely activate loose wet slides on solar slopes. Stay off steeper slopes with terrain traps. Moderate avalanche danger allows for large avalanches in isolated areas.
Recent cornices are very large. Natural cornice releases and resulting slab avalanches are dangerous and unpredictable. Give cornices a wide berth if traveling along ridge-lines and avoid slopes directly below large cornices. See a blog post regarding cornices here.
Special Note: For more information on the massive natural cornice triggered avalanche on the north side of Ruby Mountain on Sunday 3/19 and general thoughts about low-likelihood/high consequence avalanches, please see NWAC's blog post issued Sunday, March 26.
Weather and Snowpack
Let's just say it's been a wet and wild few weeks regarding weather and avalanches in the Cascades.
This past week has also been active weather-wise, but water amounts/snowfall totals have been slightly lower relative to the extreme wetness of the past few weeks. NWAC and NRCS stations east of the Cascade crest had about 6-12 inches of snow in the 5 days ending Monday morning.
Another 5-10 inches fell near the Cascade crest along with a warming trend and increasing W-SW alpine winds Tuesday night and into Wednesday. Lesser amounts were seen further east of the crest and at lower elevations.
Recent Observations
North
The NCMG were in the Cutthroat area on Monday and found 15-20 cm of recent snow on a firm base. Loose wet avalanches and cornices were the main concerns.
On Tuesday, NCMG found stubborn and shallow storm slab in hand tests and on short slope tests. Very large cornices were still looming along ridge-lines. A public observation from the Washington Pass area on Tuesday reported shallow but sensitive wind slab on steep east aspects in wind affected terrain.
Central
No recent observations.
South
No recent observations.