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RegisterJan 11th, 2018–Jan 12th, 2018
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Dangerous avalanche conditions will persist on Friday. Time and patience is required to let recent storm snow instabilities heal. Recent and fresh wind slab, potentially deep, will exist near and above treeline and may build onto open slopes below treeline. Loose wet avalanches are possible below treeline. All types of avalanches may become large by entraining recent storm snow. Travel conservatively Friday and avoid consequential terrain.
Snow levels should eventually rise to around 4000-4500 feet later Thursday night and Friday across the east slopes of the Cascades. Light to occasionally moderate showers seen through Friday morning should taper down quickly in the afternoon. Moderate post-frontal W-SW winds should taper down by Friday afternoon but continue to transport new and recent snow onto lee slopes near and above treeline.
Dangerous avalanche conditions will persist on Friday. Time and patience is required to let recent storm snow instabilities heal. Recent and fresh wind slab, potentially deep, will exist near and above treeline and may build onto open slopes below treeline. Loose wet avalanches are possible below treeline. All types of avalanches may become large by entraining recent storm snow. Travel conservatively Friday and avoid consequential terrain.
Despite the recent snow, early season hazards still exist. Many creek beds have still not filled in for the winter.
A strong storm system Wednesday night and Thursday generally brought 8"-14" of new snow to the east slopes of the Cascades with the lower amounts at Mission Ridge and Mazama, and the higher amounts at Holden, Lake Wentachee, Tumwater and with 20" at Berne through 6 pm Thursday. Moderate westerly winds persisted through the storm in the Mission Ridge area. Storm snow piled up quickly and many areas likely experienced natural storm slab avalanches primarily releasing within the new storm snow. Closer to the Cascade crest, natural avalanche cycles were observed at both Stevens and Snoqualmie Passes.
This system follows on the heels of several inches of snow received Tuesday night/Wednesday near the Cascade crest. Moderate westerly winds late Tuesday through Wednesday re-distributed snow below treeline and exposed areas and particularly near and above treeline. In the central-east zone downwind of Stevens Pass, it exposed the most recent crust in some locations or formed pockets of wind slab nearby.
The supportive 1/5 crust formed from a widespread freezing rain event in the central-east zone, extending to the Stevens and Snoqualmie Pass areas. In the northeast Cascades stretching from Washington Pass to Holden, no freezing rain crust exists.
Snowdepth still decreases substantially the further east of the Cascade crest one travels. In many areas below treeline, there has not been enough snow to present an avalanche danger but Thursday's storm may have expanded potential avalanche terrain to lower elevations.
Observations
North
No recent observations
Central
Older but still relevant observations:
A public observation from 1/5 in the Mission Ridge backcountry noted a 1/4" thick freezing rain crust up to 5000'.
Basal facets (2-3mm) observed on 1/2 above 5000' on NW-N-E aspects and failing in snowpit tests in the Blewett Pass area (and likely the Mission Ridge area) will need to be watched when enough snow returns to this area to create a potential avalanche problem.
South
No recent observations