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RegisterMar 22nd, 2021–Mar 23rd, 2021
Cariboos.
Carefully assess your line for wind slabs before committing. Steep, convex slopes below ridge tops are the most likely places to trigger these slabs.
MONDAY NIGHT: Mostly cloudy with isolated flurries, little accumulation expected. Light to moderate northwest wind, alpine low -12C, and freezing level valley bottom.
TUESDAY: Mostly cloudy with scattered flurries, trace to 5 cm. Moderate southwest wind, alpine high -4C, and freezing level rising around 1000 m.
WEDNESDAY: Snow, 10-20 cm. Moderate to strong southwest wind, alpine high -1C, and poor overnight recovery with the freezing level hovering around 1000m overnight Tuesday and rising above 1500m during the day.
THURSDAY: Mostly cloudy and unsettled. Light west wind, alpine high -1C, and freezing level rising to about 1300 m.
There have been no recent avalanche reports.
Last Wednesday our North Rockies Field team reported a size 2.5 natural cornice failure in the McBride area. This cornice triggered an East facing alpine slope with the suspected weak layer being the deeper weak facets. Just over a week ago, and likely during the first big warm-up, several large size 2.5-3 natural slab avalanches were reported - the suspect failing layer the mid-February facet interface, see some photos of this activity in this MIN. These reports indicate that the buried persistent weak interface remains somewhat active, but likely take a large load to trigger it. That being said the weight of a human and/or machine may be enough to trigger something deeper. It is a low probability - high consequence scenario with large N-E facing alpine slopes being the most suspect.
Variable winds have impacted loose snow, wind slabs may be found on a variety of aspects, likely in lee features. 15-30 cm fresh snow covers dry settled snow on northerly aspects above 1800m, and crusts on solar aspects and lower elevations. Large cornices loom over alpine ridgetops. A thick rain crust extends up to 1600m.
A persistent weak layer made up of surface hoar at treeline elevations and a crust with facets in the alpine can be found down 50-150 cm in some parts of the region. Recent reports indicate that some very large avalanches have occurred on this layer in the past week. It seems to need a large trigger like a cornice fall or a rapid flux in weather like a big warm-up.