Dashboard Regions Weather Stations Radar Alerts Glossary
Contact About
Log In

Register for an account and never miss a forecast again!

Register

Avalanche Forecast

Archived

Feb 17th, 2019–Feb 18th, 2019

Alpine
Natural avalanches possible, human triggered probable.
Treeline
Natural avalanches possible, human triggered probable.
Below Treeline
Natural avalanches unlikely, human triggered possible.
Alpine
Natural avalanches possible, human triggered probable.
Treeline
Natural avalanches possible, human triggered probable.
Below Treeline
Natural avalanches unlikely, human triggered possible.

Regions

Stevens Pass.

Recent human triggered slab avalanches have occurred on Stevens Pass. This is bullseye information that conditions remain dangerous. Travel conservatively, and stay out of complicated terrain. Put lots of space between yourself, and big, steep slopes. 

Discussion

Snow and Avalanche Discussion

On Saturday afternoon a party of two snowboarders dropped south into the backcountry off Cowboy Ridge, riding down towards Tunnel Creek. At 5,400 ft on a Southeast aspect, they triggered a D2 avalanche on a 40 degree slope, 150ft wide with an average crown depth of 26”. It ran about 400 vertical feet on facets over a crust, breaking through the crust, and stepped down to facets over another crust a few inches deeper. Both members were partially buried, one up to his his head, the other up to his waist. They were able to self rescue without injuries, and hiked up the bedsurface where they re-entered the ski area boundary.  

This is as a very relevant near miss. A good reminder that large and dangerous avalanches may still be triggered on this layer of concern. Additionally, an observer reported a rumbling collapse on a Northwest aspect at 4,100ft on Sunday. On Saturday, three separate professional parties got test results that indicated propagation on the layer of concern on Stevens Pass. Check out one of the profiles here. On Friday the 15th, a skier remotely triggered a slab from approximately 50ft away at 4,800ft in an open area between old growth trees near Lanham Lakes. The slide took out the entire clearing, edge to edge, and ran on facets over a crust.

Bottom line, if you are a gamblin' man (or woman), you may still trigger large and dangerous avalanches. In addition to avalanches, the deep snow has hazards of its own such as Snow Immersion Suffocation, tree well hazards, and roof avalanches. Don't linger beneath roofs, travel in the mountains with partners and keep them in sight.

Snowboard triggered slide in Tunnel Creek. Photo: Dan Veenhuizen 2/17/2019

 

 

Snowpack Discussion

February 15, 2019

Since February 8th, the mountains (and low elevation cities) of the Pacific Northwest have experience cold and very storm weather. Significant snowfall has added up in all forecast zones. Records from Snoqualmie Pass DOT avalanche workers back to 1973 show that February 11-12th set a record for the most snow recorded in a 24hr period at that location. The table below shows storm totals starting February 8th through the morning of the 13th

5 day totals ending morning of Feb 13th

Water Equivalent (inches)

24hr storm totals

(inches)

Difference in Height of Snow (inches)

Hurricane Ridge

1.97

N/A

+ 30

Mt. Baker

1.94

44

 

Washington Pass

1.66

NA

+ 16

Stevens Pass

2.71

49

 

Snoqualmie Pass

3.91

80

 

Mission Ridge

1.86

38

 

Crystal

2.91

59

 

Paradise

4.55

N/A

 

White Pass

N/A

57 (4400ft)

+ 26 (5800ft)

Mt. Hood Meadows

4.70

43

 

Heavy precipitation brought many mountain regions to their tipping point. Avalanches ran readily with a peak of snowfall intensity. For Stevens Pass, Snoqualmie Pass, East Central, West South, Mt Hood, and possibly West Central zones we have good confirmation that this cycle happened from the night of February 11th through the 12th. In other zones, snow totals haven’t been significant enough for widespread avalanche cycles, or we lack data (like in the East South zone).

A natural persistent slab avalanche (D2.5) on a southeast aspect at 6,600ft. Grindstone Mtn in Icicle Canyon. Likely ran 2/12. Photo: Matt Primomo

The high rates of precipitation drove avalanches in the storm snow. Notably, a persistent weak layer of facets and surface hoar was buried in most zones on February 8th. Storms produced a widespread and prolonged cycle of avalanches on the February 8th interface, involving a variety of aspects and elevations. Local ski patrols, highway workers, and backcountry travelers reported extensive avalanching with widely propagating crowns and very sensitive conditions. With less stormy weather, observers have just begun to get a sense of the extent of the avalanche activity. Triggering persistent slab avalanches will be a concern for backcountry travelers in zones where the February 8th weak layer is active for at least the near, if not distant future. Stay tuned for more updates.

Large surface hoar near Snow Lake Divide on February 7, 2019 just before it was buried on the 8th. Photo: Jeremy Allyn

Problems

Persistent Slabs

Persistent Slab avalanches are the release of a cohesive layer of snow (a slab) in the middle to upper snowpack, when the bond to an underlying persistent weak layer breaks. Persistent layers include: surface hoar, depth hoar, near-surface facets, or faceted snow. Persistent weak layers can continue to produce avalanches for days, weeks or even months, making them especially dangerous and tricky. As additional snow and wind events build a thicker slab on top of the persistent weak layer, this avalanche problem may develop into a Deep Persistent Slab.