Currently, 10 cm of new snow overlies a variety of surfaces; hard wind slabs lee of N, SW and W winds in alpine and treeline features, a well developed surface hoar in shaded areas above 1700 m., a melt-freeze crust below that elevation and a 3 cm sun crust on solar aspects at all elevations. The forecasted precipitation and warm temperatures will add a good load to the snowpack (could be another 20 mm in water equivalent till tomorrow night). The variety of surfaces described earlier will most likely be reactive to this new load and create a good
failure plane for avalanches to slide on. With freezing levels rising again tomorrow, the new dryer snow layer at the upper below treeline and treeline elevation band (between ~1500 m. and ~2000 m.). could get soaked and create wetslabs and loose wet avalanches.