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RegisterDec 18th, 2019–Dec 19th, 2019
Cariboos.
Dangerous avalanche conditions continue as storm snow continues to accumulate and stress buried weak layers.
WEDNESDAY NIGHT: Snow, accumulations of 10-25 cm, 50 km/h wind from the south, alpine temperatures drop to -8 C.
THURSDAY: Scattered flurries with another 5 cm of snow, 50 km/h wind from the south, alpine high temperatures around -4 C.
FRIDAY: 15-25 cm of snow, 50-70 km/h wind from the south, alpine high temperature -4 C.
SATURDAY: 5-10 cm of snow in by the morning then clearing in the afternoon, 30 km/h wind from the south, alpine high temperatures around -4 C.
Heavy snowfall likely resulted in a cycle of natural avalanches on Tuesday and Wednesday, leaving storm slabs very reactive to human triggering. Observations have been limited the past few days due to poor visibility.
Similar activity is expected on Thursday with more snow expected overnight and strong wind throughout the day.
A continuous pulse of storms has delivered anywhere from 20-50 cm of snow to the Cariboos over the past few days. 40-80 cm of recent snow now sits above a widespread layer of large, feathery surface hoar crystals. New snow is expected to continue to accumulate and consolidate above this layer over the next few days, maintaining a high likelihood of human-triggering.
A weak layer formed in late November is now buried around 1 m plus below the surface. This is the layer of concern relating to the persistent slab avalanche problem. The weak layer may present as surface hoar, a crust, facets or a combination, depending on elevation and aspect. Below this, a variety of crusts from late October are buried deeper in the snowpack.