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RegisterJan 21st, 2016–Jan 22nd, 2016
Olympics.
Loose wet avalanches should be the main avalanche problem Friday with plenty of wet snow in the upper snowpack. Natural avalanches are unlikely but human triggered avalanches are possible on steeper slopes. Be especially wary near terrain traps, where even a small avalanche could have unintended consequences.
Steady rain Thursday night should transition to light to moderate showers with snow levels falling to 4500 feet by Friday afternoon. Light amounts of new snow should bond well to the wet and refreezing surface on Friday.
Loose wet avalanches should be the main avalanche problem Friday with plenty of wet snow in the upper snowpack. Natural avalanches are unlikely but human triggered avalanches are possible on steeper slopes. Be especially wary near terrain traps, where even a small avalanche could have unintended consequences.
A few inches of snow likely accumulated Monday through Wednesday, with the Waterhole NRCS snowdepth slowly rising to 76 inches through mid-week.
A wet and warm frontal system drenched the Olympics Wednesday night and Thursday with snow levels rising above Hurricane Ridge. This likely caused a loose wet avalanche cycle on steeper slopes in all elevation bands.
Hurricane Ridge weather station update: NWAC forecaster Garth Ferber was at Hurricane Ridge Thursday and with the help of NPS IT staff fixed the station! They established a connection Thursday afternoon and the data should start flowing online very soon. We appreciate everyone's patience and believe that our new internet connection to the weather station will prove to be far more reliable than the aging microwave it replaced last spring.