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RegisterApr 6th, 2019–Apr 7th, 2019
Stevens Pass.
Dangerous conditions can be expected for Sunday, with both dry snow, and wet avalanches. Significant recent accumulations may be found up high, and temperatures may warm rapidly during the day. These are both red flags for avalanche danger. Sunday would be a good day to travel with a conservative mindset, and avoid avalanche terrain.
The mountains are caught between the changing seasons. Significantly more snow may be found as one goes up in elevation. On Saturay Stevens Pass Mountain Resort reported 4-5" of new snow. Small loose wet avalanches became easy to initiate, as temperatures and freezing levels crept up in the afternoon. The stormy weekend continues, and so will the avalanche danger. Dangerous conditions may develop by Sunday morning with another bout of snow and rain with warming temperatures. There is a wide range of precipitation in the weather models, as such, avalanche danger may vary widely. You’ll need to pay attention to the conditions around you and determine if the weather you’re experiencing lies outside of the forecast. When you see observations that don’t line-up with what you expected, dial back your travel to lower angled slopes.
Be sure to consider all the hazards that come with spring in the mountains. Factor in a good margin for error as hard to predict events like cornice fall, glide avalanches, icefall, rockfall, and a general “shed cycle” in the mountains has been the theme, but maybe more so after this latest round of storms.
April 3rd, 2019
Spring snowmelt
The snowpack in much of the Cascades has changed dramatically in the past two weeks. The weather has shifted solidly to spring-like patterns. The spring warm-up started in mid-March with a prolonged period of relatively clear skies and warm temperatures. Moving into April, we’re seeing periods of unsettled spring weather bringing rain to many low and mid-elevation slopes and snow to upper elevations.
Very bare southeast aspects of Rock Mtn/Nason Ridge. April 2nd. Photo: Josh Hirshberg
Since the peak height of snow in mid to late February, mountain weather stations in the 4,000-5,000ft range show an average of 27% decrease in height of snow. Looking at weather stations in nearly every zone, the percentage decrease ranged from 22-29%. This year's spring snowmelt is much earlier than normal. Traveling in the mountains the loss of snow coverage is most noticeable on southerly, sun-exposed slopes and below 4,000ft. On northerly aspects and slopes above 5,500ft, the snowpack has seen less dramatic changes and has even maintained some dry layers.
NWAC climatological snow depth data from April 1st. You can view it on our website here.
Spring avalanche considerations
As you head into the mountains there are a few questions to ask yourself common to spring avalanche conditions:
Is there any recent snow accumulation that could cause avalanches? If so, what kind of avalanches could you trigger? And where?
What are the high and low temperatures of the past 24 hours as well as the forecasted temperatures during the time you’ll be in the mountains? Could these create weak, wet snow surfaces?
How is the cloud cover contributing to the melting or freezing of surface snow? Did clear skies allow for a sufficient overnight freeze? Will the sun be strong enough to weaken surface layers?
Glide avalanches and holes opening up in rocky terrain near Mount Herman. Photo: Andrew Kiefer
Other considerations
In addition to daily avalanche hazard, the early snowmelt is creating some other travel considerations. Some roads and lower elevation slopes may not have enough continuous snow coverage for travel on snow machines. Holes melted around rocks, trees, and creeks could create a fall hazard. When nighttime temperatures and cloud cover allow for surface freezes, bring appropriate equipment to mitigate slip and fall hazard on steep slopes.
We are approaching the end of our daily avalanche forecasting season. The mountain weather forecast will continue into the spring, and the weather station data is available year round. Keep checking the forecast for conditions updates on the end of season information.