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RegisterFeb 14th, 2017–Feb 15th, 2017
Olympics.
Wednesday will be a potentially dangerous day at Hurricane Ridge. Travel in avalanche terrain is not recommended at Hurricane Ridge on Wednesday.
Strong southwest flow aloft will carry a very moist frontal system to the Northwest on Wednesday. This will cause stormy wet weather in the Olympics on Wednesday with rain and high snow levels. See the NWAC Mountain Weather Forecast for details.
Wednesday will be a potentially dangerous day at Hurricane Ridge. Natural or triggered large or very large loose wet and wet slab avalanches are likely on Wednesday depending on how much rain there is, how it percolates into the snowpack and if avalanches entrain deeper layers.
Observations and tests for loose wet avalanches are more straightforward such as wet surface snow deeper than a few inches, rollerballs and natural loose wet avalanche actiivity.
But observations and tests for wet slab avalanches are more difficult since it is usually hard to know the effects of significant amounts of water percolating into the snowpack.
Travel in avalanche terrain is not recommended at Hurricane Ridge on Wednesday.
Weather and Snowpack
The aftermath of the last storm cycle 2/8-2/10 left a very strong rain crust with whatever amount of new snow received above, except for areas exposed to west winds which remained scoured to the firm and slick crust.
High pressure Saturday to Tuesday brought increasing sunshine and warm temperatures. Temperatures reached the 40's and 50's in many areas of the Olympics and Cascades by Monday and Tuesday. This caused a lot of snowpack settlement, some small loose wet avalanche activity and a decreasing avalanche danger.
Recent Observations
NWAC pro-observer Matt Schonwald was at Hurricane Ridge on Friday and found good skiing in non-wind affected areas well below ridges. Closer to the ridgeline, new wind slabs were quickly building on the lee easterly slopes up to 1 foot deep. These slabs were very sensitive to ski triggering with cracking readily observed on test slopes. One large loose wet avalanche was observed by the road crew Friday morning, with a few small trees in the 6-8 ft debris pile. Large cornices that had built on W-NW aspects earlier in the week were quickly being eroded by the strong W-SW winds.