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RegisterApr 21st, 2021–Apr 22nd, 2021
Kootenay Boundary.
Another day of warm weather and some sunny skies. If the snowpack is wet and mushy it could avalanche easily. Start and finish your day early and avoid sun-exposed terrain.
Overnight Wednesday: Mostly clear with some upper-level cloud entering the region. Light northwest wind and freezing levels dropping to 700 m.
Thursday: Mix of sun and cloud with light precipitation 2-5 mm. Ridgetop wind light from the northeast. Alpine temperatures near +3 C and freezing levels 2100 m.
Friday: A mix of sun and cloud. Light winds from the East. Alpine temperatures near +1 C and freezing levels 1800 m.
Saturday: Snow 10-20 cm. Alpine temperatures near -2 and freezing levels 1600 m.
There have been no recent avalanche reports since last Saturday.
Last weekend, reports of natural loose wet avalanches size 2-3 on solar aspects continued. Explosive work produced size 2-3.5 wet slab avalanches, failing on crusts in the upper snowpack and gouging to the ground as they ran to near valley bottom.
The snow surface consists of a melt-freeze crust on all aspects of the mountain top. Only high alpine slopes above 2100 m and due North may still hold some softer, dryer snow. With a limited freeze overnight and rising freezing levels by Thursday afternoon, this crust may break down quickly with mostly wet snow surfaces. There are no layers of concern in the snowpack, which has been melting and settling over the past week. Lower elevations have mostly been isothermal and melting away rapidly.
Large cornices loom along many ridgelines. They are weak and very unpredictable.
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