Strong winds from a wide range of directions (mostly northwesterly) have been blowing for the past several days, scouring some slopes and creating touchy wind slabs at tree line and above. Where the wind has not affected the snow, you'll find 30-50cm of settling storm snow from last week. A crust and/or weak feathery surface hoar layer buried in mid-January now lies about 100 cm below the surface. The crust exists well into the alpine and the surface hoar can be found in sheltered areas in the lower alpine and tree line elevations. Snowpack tests produced hard, sudden results on weak, sugary snow crystals associated with this crust in the Smithers area, indicating that this is still a layer of concern to watch for.Another two crust / surface hoar layers that were buried in December are now 100-150 cm below the surface. These layers produced sudden results in snowpack tests and have been the suspected weak layer in large remotely (from a distance) triggered avalanches.
See here for a good summary of recent snowpack test results near Smithers.