Avalanche Forecast

Issued: Jan 30th, 2017 4:26PM

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

Avalanche Canada rbuhler, Avalanche Canada

Recently formed wind slabs are expected to remain touchy on Tuesday. Use extra caution in wind exposed terrain and watch for signs of recent wind loading in leeward and cross-loaded terrain features.

Summary

Confidence

High -

Weather Forecast

A ridge of high of pressure is forecast to keep the region cold and dry for the next several days. On Tuesday, mostly sunny conditions are expected with light to moderate northeast wind in the alpine and treeline temperatures around -15C. Wednesday and Thursday are forecast to be sunny with light northeast wind in the alpine and treeline temperatures remaining around -15C.

Avalanche Summary

On Sunday, a natural size 1.5 wind slab avalanche was reported near Invermere on a northwest aspect at 2600 m elevation which had a slab thickness of 50 cm. In the Dogtooth, a few small natural wind slab avalanches were observed which were 5-15 cm thick. A MIN report from the Quartz Creek area shows a sledder triggered size 2 wind slab avalanche. Click here for more details. A skier also triggered a size 1 wind slab avalanche on an east aspect at 2400 m elevation which had a slab thickness of 30 cm. On Saturday, a MIN report from south of Panorama describes a snowmobile triggered avalanche on a south aspect with a slab thickness of 20-30 cm. Click here for more details. A skier also triggered a size 1 wind slab avalanche on a north aspect at 2300 m elevation. The slab was 15-20 cm thick.On Tuesday, recently formed wind slabs are expected to remain reactive to human triggering. Winds have recently switched from south to north and wind slabs should be expected on all aspects.

Snowpack Summary

Recent strong shifting winds have formed wind slabs on a variety of aspects in wind exposed terrain. A new sun crust is being reported on steep solar aspects. The mid-January interface is now down 20-50 cm and consists of buried surface hoar in sheltered areas, old wind slabs in exposed terrain, and/or widespread faceted old snow. The interface has generally stabilized but isolated weaknesses may still exist where buried surface hoar is preserved. The mid-December surface hoar/facet weakness from is down 50-100 cm and is generally considered dormant. However, a few storm slab and wind slab avalanches stepped down to this layer last week in isolated areas. This layer remains an isolated concern for shallow snowpack areas where the weakness is closer to the snow surface.

Problems

Wind Slabs

An icon showing Wind Slabs
Recently formed wind slabs are expected to be touchy. Recent winds have been from a variety of directions and wind slabs should be expected on all aspects in wind exposed terrain.
Use caution in lee areas. Recent wind loading has created wind slabs.Avoid areas where the surface snow feels stiff or slabby.Use ridges or ribs to avoid pockets of wind loaded snow.

Aspects: All aspects.

Elevations: Alpine, Treeline.

Likelihood

Possible - Likely

Expected Size

1 - 2

Valid until: Jan 31st, 2017 2:00PM