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RegisterJan 29th, 2022–Jan 30th, 2022
North Columbia.
Avalanche danger will rise through the day as touchy storm slabs build over a weak layer. If you see more than 25 cm by the end of the day, treat avalanche danger as HIGH.
Deeply buried weak layers remain on our minds. Potential exists for step downs to larger avalanches.
The Monashees will see highest snowfall amounts out of this storm.
Saturday night: Snowfall 5-10 cm, moderate SW wind, treeline temperature around -8 °C.
Sunday: Snowfall 10-25 cm, moderate SW wind, treeline high around -5 °C.
Monday: Snowfall 15-25 cm overnight then clearing, light NW wind, treeline high around -10 °C.
Tuesday: Scattered flurries, moderate NW wind, treeline high around -13 °C.
The theme over the past week has been large cornice failures and wind slab avalanches size 2-3 on north to east aspects in the alpine. On Friday, wind slabs were reactive to explosives up to size 3 and skier traffic up to size 1. Dry loose avalanches have also been observed up to size 2.
On Tuesday, a natural size 1.5 persistent slab was reported on an E aspect at 1900 m in the Monashees north of Revelstoke, likely failing on one of the surface hoar or crust layers 30-45 cm deep.
Deep persistent slab activity on the early December facet/crust layer slowed down during the dry spell. Most recently, two naturals were reported on Monday, size 2.5-3. Between January 20 and 23, numerous very large (size 2.5-4.5) deep persistent slab avalanches occurred on this layer, typically 100-150 cm deep.
15-35 cm of new snow falls over faceting wind affected surfaces in the alpine, a melt-freeze crust on steep solar aspects & low elevations and a widespread layer of large surface hoar crystals, especially prominent in shady, wind sheltered areas at elevations near the top of the previous valley fog layer (1200-1500 m). New snow is expected to adhere poorly at this interface.
There are three prominent layers in the upper snowpack which have been largely dormant during the dry spell but may become reactive with new snow loads. These include a layer of surface hoar down 20-30 cm, a layer of facets and/or surface hoar from early January down around 40-60 cm, and a thick layer of facets from the end of December down close to 1 m.
The primary weak layer that remains a widespread concern across the Columbia Mountains is a deeply buried crust/facet layer that formed in early December. It is typically down 100-180 cm, but as deep as 250 cm in wind-loaded terrain. This layer is likely to plague our snowpack for the remainder of the season and will be a low probability but extremely high consequence result if triggered. Check out our latest forecaster blog on the crust that never dies.