Avalanche Forecast

Issued: Feb 8th, 2023 4:00PM

The alpine rating is considerable, the treeline rating is moderate, and the below treeline rating is moderate. Known problems include Wind Slabs and Loose Wet.

Avalanche Canada rgoddard, Avalanche Canada

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Recent snowfall, moderate winds, and warm temperatures have created a number of avalanche problems.

Use cautious route-finding and evaluate snow and terrain carefully.

Summary

Confidence

Moderate

Avalanche Summary

In the last several days, no avalanche activity has been reported. Be aware that this is not an indication that human-triggered avalanches will not happen, they still can occur.

Please continue to post your reports and photos to the Mountain Information Network.

Snowpack Summary

Around 35 of recent snow now sits on a variety of surfaces. It will have been redistributed at higher elevations by southwest winds.

A melt-freeze crust formed in mid-January is now buried 50 to 70 cm deep. At the moment this layer is gaining strength. The snow below this layer is consolidating nicely. Buried up to 120 cm is another layer of concern, a crust, formed near the end of December.

Snowpack depths are below seasonal averages. Total amounts range from 150 to 200 cm at treeline, but decrease significantly below 1500 m.

Weather Summary

Wednesday Night

Mostly cloudy with some clear periods, no accumulation, winds west 15 to 30 km/h, treeline temperatures -7 C.

Thursday

Sunny with morning cloud, trace accumulation in the northwest, winds south southwest 25 to 32, treeline temperatures warming to 0 C.

Friday

Cloudy, up to 15 cm accumulation, winds southwest 25 to 35 km/h, treeline temperatures -4 C with freezing level getting up to 1500 m.

Saturday

Cloudy, 5 cm accumulation, winds west southwest 25 to 40 km/h, treeline temperatures -5 C.

More details can be found in the Mountain Weather Forecast.

Terrain and Travel Advice

  • Be carefull around freshly wind loaded features.
  • Continue to make conservative terrain choices while the storm snow settles and stabilizes.
  • Storm slabs in motion may step down to deeper layers resulting in large avalanches.
  • The more the snow feels like a slurpy, the more likely loose wet avalanches will become.

Problems

Wind Slabs

An icon showing Wind Slabs

Moderate to strong southerly winds have and will continue to redistribute snow creating large potentially reactive wind slab.

In more sheltered areas you may find storm slabs forming where the wind has had less effect.

Aspects: North, North East, East, South East, West, North West.

Elevations: Alpine, Treeline.

Likelihood

Possible - Likely

Expected Size

1 - 2

Loose Wet

An icon showing Loose Wet

Warming temperatures and recent precipitation could cause conditions that would result in wet loose avalanches. Be cautious around steep terrain where the surface snow feels slushy.

Aspects: All aspects.

Elevations: Below Treeline.

Likelihood

Unlikely - Possible

Expected Size

1 - 2

Valid until: Feb 9th, 2023 4:00PM