On Tuesday, a ski cut triggered a thin size 1 storm slab on a north aspect at 2000 m. Explosives triggered a size 2.5 cornice which cleaned out the slope below. On Monday, a natural cornice release triggered a size 1.5 wind slab on a north aspect at 2500 m and a natural size 2 storm slab was observed on a southeast aspect at 2200 m. Four natural size 2.5-3 wind slabs were also observed on southeast and east aspects at 2250-2400 m. Explosives triggered a deep persistent slab on a northeast aspect that released up to 2 m deep. Over the weekend, a widespread avalanche cycle occurred with avalanches up to size 4.5. This included very large cornice releases, avalanches releasing on layers near the base of the snowpack, propagations over 1 km wide, and mature timber being broken.
Click here for photos of the recent avalanches.On Thursday, sun is expected to drive the hazard. If there is are long periods of strong sun, expect sluffing from steep sun exposed slopes, cornices will become weak, and persistent slab avalanches could fail naturally. With the recent avalanche activity and several weak layers within snowpack waking up, it is a time to be very conservative with terrain selection.