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RegisterApr 11th, 2021–Apr 12th, 2021
Sea To Sky.
Tune in and anticipate the effects of warming as you travel. It will affect increasingly high elevations and shaded aspects over the coming days. Be especially wary of slopes with cornices above them.
Sunday night: Clear. Light north winds, increasing into the morning.
Monday: Sunny. Moderate northeast winds, becoming strong overnight. Alpine high temperatures around -4 with freezing levels to 1600 metres.
Tuesday: Sunny. Light northeast winds. Alpine high temperatures around 0 with freezing levels to 2100 metres, continuing to rise overnight
Wednesday: Sunny. Light to moderate northeast winds, potentially strong in the alpine. Alpine high temperatures around +4 with freezing levels to 2500 metres.
Saturday's MIN was active! Many users in the Sea to Sky and in adjacent regions encountered unstable snow conditions. Avalanche activity appears to have been limited to the depth of our latest storm snow, which was substantial in southern parts of the region. Wind loaded features were (unsurprisingly) especially reactive.
Looking forward, Monday's concerns should be limited to lingering wind slabs and predictable wet loose activity connected to daytime warming. Tuesday ushers in the start of a dramatic warming trend that will begin to expand the extent of wet loose concerns to higher elevation, more shaded aspects and may eventually test deeper snowpack layers.
New surface melt-freeze crusts formed on solar aspects by the end of the day Saturday atop 10-30 cm of new snow, tapering with elevation and toward the north of the region, that accumulated through Friday night. Strong to extreme south and east winds have left behind varying levels of wind effect on many aspects in open terrain. Whistler Peak saw gusts of up to 140 km/h during the storm.
Overall the new snow is likely to have now established a solid bond with the previous surfaces of crust, wind effect, and settled storm snow, however isolated slabs in steep, wind loaded features may remain reactive to human triggering.
Solar warming will break down surface crusts and encourage wet loose releases -both natural and human triggered- each day on solar aspects and increasingly toward shaded alpine terrain as freezing levels march upward over the coming days.
Cornices are large and looming along ridgelines and formed fragile new growth during Friday's storm. Their release is unpredictable, requiring a large berth if you're travelling above or below them. Forecast rising freezing levels will increase the chances of cornice releases.