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RegisterApr 6th, 2022–Apr 7th, 2022
North Columbia.
Recent storm snow combined with significant warming and solar radiation are driving the avalanche hazard, especially by the afternoon.
Check out the Forecaster Blog for additional details.
Thursday: A mix of sun, clouds, and very WARM. Freezing levels rise to 2900 m by the afternoon. Alpine temperatures +3C and ridgetop wind moderate to strong from the southwest.
Friday: No overnight refreeze and WARM. The freezing level holds at 2900 m but should start to drop by 4 pm. Cloudy with a mix of rain and snow up to 15 mm. Ridgetop winds strong from the southwest.
Saturday: Cloudy and cold with new snow up to 10 cm. Freezing levels drop to 700 m and ridgetop winds switch to the northwest.
On Tuesday, numerous natural, explosive, and rider-triggered avalanches were reported up to size 3.5. Most of these avalanches failed within the recent storm snow, however, some of the larger ones were reported as a persistent slabs that failed on a buried crust.
Continued warm temperatures solar radiation will likely trigger a natural avalanche cycle on Thursday and Friday.
By Thursday afternoon, wet snow surfaces may exist to mountain top on most aspects leaving only high North facing terrain with some dry snow.
20 to 40 cm of recent storm snow has buried multiple crusts in the upper snowpack. Moderate to strong west/ southwest has redistributed some new storm snow in exposed high elevation terrain forming wind slabs and developing large cornices.
The new snow brings 60-80 cm above the crust from late March. This crust is present on all aspects up to an elevation of 2500 m.
The early-December rain crust is approximately a metre off the ground. Large slab avalanches failed on this interface last week following a rain and warming event. This layer may be active over the next two days of warm weather.