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RegisterDec 17th, 2023–Dec 18th, 2023
Jasper, Brazeau, Churchill, Cirrus-Wilson, Fryatt, Icefields, Maligne, Marmot, Miette Lake, Pyramid.
Natural avalanches are unlikely but human triggered avalanches are still possible. Alpine wind loaded features should be approached with caution.As temperatures rise above zero in the lower elevations, ice climbers should watch for overhead hazards in form of loose wet/dry sluffs or a rock fall.
Few small wind slabs observed in the last few days across the region. These slabs were found near ridge tops on northerly aspects and did not step down to deeper instabilities.
The snowpack is 50-80cm deep and is weak and facetted. A surface hoar layer is down 15-20cm below 2300m. Strong winds have stripped exposed alpine and tree-line terrain and created wind-slabs in cross-loaded and lee features. Windward slopes are either stripped of snow or the snow left has been pressed into sastrugi.
The Mountain Weather Forecast is available at Avalanche Canada https://avalanche.ca/weather/forecast
MondayCloudy with scattered flurries. Accumulation: 4 cm. Alpine temperature: High -2 °C. Ridge wind southwest: 10-30 km/h. Freezing level: 1900 metres.