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RegisterMar 11th, 2022–Mar 12th, 2022
South Columbia.
10-20 cm of forecast snow and moderate west winds on Friday night will form fresh storm slabs that will be most reactive in wind affected terrain.
Start in simple terrain and use small slopes with low consequence to test the bond of the new snow.
FRIDAY NIGHT: Snow; 10-20 cm / Moderate west winds / Low of -6 / Freezing level 700 m.
SATURDAY: Flurries; 5-10 cm / Light southwest wind / High of 0 / Freezing level 1500 m.
SUNDAY: Mostly cloudy / Light southwest wind / High of 1 / Freezing level 1600 m.
MONDAY: Flurries; 5-10 cm / Moderate southwest wind / High of 1 / Freezing level 1600 m.
Several natural and skier triggered wind slabs to size 2 were reported on Thursday. Additionally, a cornice failure triggered a size 2.5 slab avalanche.
Several very large human triggered persistent slab avalanches up to size 3 were reported last weekend. They occurred primarily in the Valhalla, Goat, and Kokanee Ranges typically on north through southeast facing slopes at treeline elevations. They were failing on a layer of surface hoar down 70-120 cm.
The most likely triggers of these persistent slabs are large triggers such as smaller avalanches in motion, cornices, or snowmobiles.
10-20 cm of forecast snow and moderate west winds on Friday night will form fresh storm slabs that will be most reactive in wind affected terrain.
The new snow will be sitting on a variety of surfaces including hard wind affected snow, sun crusts on southerly slopes, and surface hoar on shady or sheltered slopes. Expect storm slabs to be most reactive where they are sitting on either a sun crust or surface hoar.
The late February persistent weak layer combination of crust, facets and surface hoar is down 40-50 cm. Reports suggest this layer is becoming less reactive in most areas.
Two additional persistent weak layers from late January and mid-February are down 80-120 cm. They both consist of surface hoar and/or melt-freeze crusts. Recent trends indicate these layers have only been reactive in southern Selkirks around the Valhalla, Kokanee, and Goat Ranges. Several natural and human triggered avalanches occurred on these layers last weekend.