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RegisterApr 22nd, 2019–Apr 23rd, 2019
North Columbia.
New snow and moderate winds Monday night may create small wind slabs that when in motion, step-down to the recent storm snow, resulting in large avalanches.
MONDAY NIGHT: Cloudy with alpine flurries; 5-10 mm. / Moderate, southwesterly winds / Alpine low -1 C / Freezing level 1900 m.
TUESDAY: Cloudy with isolated alpine flurries; 2-5 mm / Moderate, southwesterly winds / Alpine high 4 C / Freezing level 2000 m.
WEDNESDAY: Sunny / Moderate, westerly winds / Alpine high 3 C / Freezing level 1800 m.
THURSDAY: Mostly sunny / Light, westerly winds / Alpine high 4 C / Freezing level 2000 m.
No new avalanches were reported in this region on Sunday. However, there are currently very few professional observers submitting daily observations. Please submit your observations to the MIN. Photos of avalanches or current conditions are particularly useful.
On Saturday, numerous, natural loose wet avalanches up to size 1.5 were reported on steep solar aspects at treeline and above in the afternoon.
A widespread storm slab avalanche cycle to size 3.5 on all aspects in the alpine was reported on Friday. Although not in this region, check out these two MIN reports from Saturday in Glacier National Park HERE. and HERE.
30-40 mm of rain has soaked the snowpack at treeline and below. The rain/snow boundary on Friday was around 2100 m. New snow amounts in the alpine will taper rapidly with elevation and likely equate to around 15-25 cm of moist snow at upper elevations adding to the 20-40 cm recent snow which overlies a crust everywhere except high elevation, north facing terrain where preserved surface hoar (weak, feathery crystals) may be present in isolated locations down 30-60 cm. A similar layer buried in early April is down 50-80 cm. Smaller storm slab avalanches may step down to one of these deeper weak layers.
Below treeline, snow is disappearing rapidly.