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RegisterApr 26th, 2018–Apr 27th, 2018
Mt Hood.
Warm-weather avalanche hazards will persist on Friday. You can trigger a Loose Wet avalanche that can gouge deeply and gain mass rapidly in soft, poorly bonded snow. Give cornices a wide buffer while traveling on ridges and avoid spending time on slopes below them.
Friday will be a transitional day out of our warm, dry pattern with low clouds spilling into the Mt. Hood area early and thickening, possibly bringing some light rain in the afternoon.
You can trigger Loose Wet avalanches, especially with the impact of morning solar radiation, at all elevations and on any aspect. Temperatures have not been below freezing since Monday morning at mid-elevation stations and with a lack of refreeze on the surface, Loose Wet avalanches may initiate at any time of the day. Use extra caution on large, steep, and unsupported slopes where you may be able to trigger a large avalanche. If you sink in wet snow up to the top of your boots, avoid slopes over 35 degrees.
Give cornices a wide buffer. They are sagging under the warm temperatures and will break naturally or you could easily trigger them. Cornices will often break surprisingly far back from the edge. Make sure you are well off and out from under cornices, especially while direct or filtered sunshine is reaching the snow surface. Cornice fall could be big enough to kill you and could also trigger Loose Wet avalanches.
A large ridge of high pressure has developed over the Mt. Hood region and temperatures have progressively warmed from Sunday through Thursday. Since late Monday morning, most mid-elevation sites have remained above freezing and by Thursday, daytime high temperatures were in the 50's and 60's at mid-elevation stations. A l lack of overnight refreeze for multiple consecutive nights, created unstable surface snow conditions with poor bonding of moist or wet, rounding grains in the upper snowpack.
Warm temperatures should have healed wind slabs formed 4/21 and prevented snow transport on 4/23 and 4/24 during moderate easterly flow.
About an inch of new snow fell 4/20 as a frontal system largely missed Mt. Hood and affected areas further north. Moderate west winds near and above treeline did not have any new snow to transport. No new avalanches were reported 4/21.
Warm and generally sunny weather affected the snow in the Mt Hood area 4/19 and 4/20.
Significant snowfall accumulated in the Mt Hood area earlier in the week. Around 16-20 inches (40-50 cm) of snow fell 4/15 through 4/17. Strong west-southwest winds during the storm transported the new snow forming wind slabs which have subsequently healed.
While numerous layers can be found within the snowpack, there are no significant layers of concern at this time.