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RegisterJan 20th, 2021–Jan 21st, 2021
Sea To Sky.
Isolated wind slabs and large overhanging cornices may remain triggerable by humans. Give cornices their space when travelling on ridgetops and check your line for pockets of wind slab beneath ridge crests and on steep roll-overs.
Wednesday night: Partly cloudy, light ridgetop wind, freezing level 500 m.
Thursday: Mix of sun and cloud, light wind, alpine high -8, freezing level 800 m.
Friday: Sunny, light wind, alpine high -4, freezing level 500 m.
Saturday: Sunny, light wind, alpine high -8, freezing level valley bottom.
A few small wind slab avalanches have been reported since the weekend. Explosive control targeting cornices on Friday and Saturday produced size 2 results, some triggering deep slabs on the rocky slopes below.
Earlier this month, we saw significant deep persistent slab activity, both natural and human triggered.
Extensive wind effect in the alpine includes scoured windward aspects and hard slabs in lee terrain. Soft snow may be found in sheltered areas around treeline. A widespread surface crust exists below 1900 m and on south-facing slopes.
Remnants of a melt-freeze crust from early December may be found around 200 cm deep in the snowpack. Several large natural and human triggered avalanches failed on this layer earlier this month. Although it still shows propagation and collapse to moderate to hard loading in the most recent snowpack tests, it has become well bridged by overlying snow and crust.