Register for an account and never miss a forecast again!
RegisterRegister for an account and never miss a forecast again!
RegisterMar 12th, 2020–Mar 13th, 2020
South Columbia.
The recent storm snow may sit on a weak surface hoar layer and a sun crust on steep solar aspects which is reactive to human triggers. A shift in wind direction to northeast will form fresh wind slabs at all elevations on previously windward slopes throughout the day.
Thursday night: Mostly cloudy with isolated flurries, light northerly wind, alpine high temperature -14 C, freezing level at valley bottom.
Friday: Mostly cloudy, scattered flurries with up to 5 cm of snow accumulation, moderate northeast wind, alpine high temperature -14 C, freezing level at valley bottom.
Saturday: Mostly cloudy with isolated flurries, moderate northeast wind, alpine high temperature -20 C, freezing level at valley bottom.
Sunday: Sunny, light northeast wind, alpine high temperature -15 C, freezing level at valley bottom.
Numerous wind slab and storm slab avalanches up to size 2.5 were triggered naturally and by humans on Tuesday and Wednesday. Many released on the old snow surface which consists of a weak surface hoar layer and a sun crust on steep solar aspects. Some of these avalanches stepped down to the persistent weak surface hoar layer from February 22 and resulted in large avalanches up to size 3.
A few natural and human triggered storm slabs up to size 2 were reported on Monday.
Reports of large (size 2-3) human, remotely and explosive-triggered avalanches releasing on the February 22 surface hoar layer continued over the past week from operators region-wide. This layer continues to surprise people with remote-triggered activity, wide propagation, and a false sense of stability from unreactive ski cuts or from multiple people moving through the terrain before an avalanche releases (see this Instagram report as a good example). Observations have extended to all aspects and elevations, but north to east aspects near treeline have been a hot-spot for reactivity. Avalanches have also occurred at unusually high elevations for surface hoar, with several cases of wind slabs stepping down in the alpine. While the number of reported avalanches has decreased, the size has increased, with more of the activity releasing size 2+.
The recent storm delivered 20-40 cm of snow with strong southwest winds which then shifted to northwest wind. The snow surface varies from soft snow to wind pressed in the alpine and at wind exposed treeline elevations. The recent snow may sit on a surface hoar layer and a sun crust on steep solar aspects. The new snow is not expected to bond well with these previous surfaces.
A widespread weak layer of surface hoar is buried 60-120 cm deep. On solar aspects, this layer may sit over a crust. This persistent slab problem is transitioning into a low probability/high consequence scenario. The snow above the weak layer has increased in depth and slab properties, making avalanches more difficult to trigger and masking obvious clues that the problem is present (i.e. cracking, whumpfing). However, if triggered, avalanches will be large and getting caught could have serious consequences. Managing this problem requires a patient and diligent mindset, implemented by avoiding suspect slopes and maintaining conservative terrain margins. This persistent weak layer will likely pose the threat of a low probability/high consequence avalanche until there is a substantial change in the snowpack. Read more about surface hoar on our forecaster blog.