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RegisterMar 14th, 2025–Mar 15th, 2025
Cariboos, Blue River, Clearwater, Premier, Quesnel, Clemina, North Monashee.
Storm snow is settling and taking its time to bond to old layers.
Continue to choose conservative terrain, as the likelihood of triggering large avalanches remains elevated.
On Friday near Mcbride, a few small to large (size 1-2) natural and human trigger avalanches where observed in both alpine and treeline vegetation bands. Near Valemount, a very large natural avalanche released (see photo for more info).
Two large (size 2) naturally triggered persistent slab avalanches were observed in the alpine near Valemount on Tuesday. These occurred on east aspects, were 100 cm deep, and failed on the buried weak layer noted in the snowpack summary.
60 to 90 cm of storm snow has accumulated over the past 7 days. All this snow sits on a hard melt-freeze crust found everywhere except north-facing slopes above 1600 m. There may also be isolated surface hoar crystals above the crust in wind-sheltered terrain around treeline. Southwest wind may have formed deeper and touchier deposits in lee terrain features at high elevations.
A weak layer of surface hoar and/or faceted grains buried mid-February is around 70 to 120 cm deep.
The lower snowpack is well-settled.
Friday Night
Mostly cloudy with 1 to 3 cm of snow. 10 to 20 km/h southwest ridgetop wind. Treeline temperature -12 °C.
Saturday
Mostly cloudy with 2 to 5 cm of snow. 20 to 50 km/h southwest ridgetop wind. Treeline temperature -6 °C.
Sunday
Mostly cloudy with 2 to 5 cm of snow. 20 to 30 km/h southwest ridgetop wind. Treeline temperature -5 °C.
Monday
Mostly cloudy with 2 to 5 cm of snow. 20 to 30 km/h southwest ridgetop wind. Treeline temperature -5 °C.
More details can be found in the Mountain Weather Forecast.