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RegisterJan 22nd, 2023–Jan 23rd, 2023
Lizard-Flathead, South Rockies, Flathead, Lizard, Bull, Elkford East, Elkford West.
Watch for wind slab reactivity at higher elevations.
The complex snowpack continues to demand thoughtful terrain selection to avoid triggering a very large avalanche.
Keep up the safe travel choices and avoid shallow rocky start zones.
Avalanche control on Saturday produced size 1 to 2 avalanches that were created from storm slabs and wind slabs.
Although they have not produced avalanches in the last few days, instabilities from the deep persistent slab still exist and should be assumed to be lurking in the backcountry.
Soft thin wind slabs have developed in exposed areas. It has been blending into older wind-affected surfaces above 1800 to 2000 m. Below this elevation, recent snow has settled on a melt-freeze crust that developed earlier this month.
A crust/facet layer (2 to 15 cm thick at treeline elevation) is down 50 to 90 cm. Where it's thickest, it caps the settled and consolidated mid-snowpack.
Another crust/facet layer is down 70 to 150 cm. Below this crust, the basal snowpack is weak and faceted. The total snowpack depth ranges between 120 and 250 cm.
Sunday Night
Clear with increasing cloud, trace to 3 cm accumulation, 10 to 20 km/h west winds, treelin temperatures -9 C.
Monday
Cloudy with clearing later in the day, up to 4 cm accumulation, 20 to 30 km/h southwest wind, treeline temperatures -11 C.
Tuesday
A mix of sun and cloud, trace accumulation, 15 to 20 km/h southwest wind, treeline temperatures -10 C.
Wednesday
Cloudy with sunny breaks and clearing off in the afternoon, potential trace accumulation, 10 km/h west wind gusting to 30, treeline temperatures -10 to -5 C.
More details can be found in the Mountain Weather Forecast.