Avalanche Forecast
Regions: Cascades - South East.
Strong winds will drift the new snow into thick slabs. In places these are sitting on a hard, refrozen crust, and may not bond well. Identify wind slabs by their shape, texture, and feel. Look to avoid these slabs on steep slopes.
Discussion
Avalanche and Snowpack Discussion
Approximately 5-10â of fresh new snow will accumulate Saturday night and Sunday; strong winds will blow it onto a variety of aspects.
A rain crust from January 3rd should exist up to elevations exceeding 6,000 ft.
We have no direct snowpack or avalanche observations from this area. However, a weaker and more dangerous snowpack has taken root along the east slopes of the Cascades further to the north. We haven't confirmed the same weak and dangerous snowpack structure exists south of Icicle Creek drainage, so you will need to take the time to evaluate conditions for yourself before entering avalanche terrain.
Forecast Schedule and No Rating
At this time, we do not have enough specific snowpack information to issue an avalanche hazard rating for the East Slopes South zone. However, even when No Rating is applied, applicable avalanche conditions and backcountry travel advice will be provided throughout the season. When weather systems produce very dangerous avalanche conditions in adjacent zones, NWAC will issue an avalanche warning for this zone as well.
Snowpack Discussion
January 4, 2019
The first few days of 2019 were active here in the Northwest. A strong weather system impacted the region bringing warm temperatures, heavy precipitation, and strong winds. This weather system did not impact the forecast areas equally. Even within the same forecast zone we can see wide discrepancies in precipitation numbers. The snowpack you encounter this weekend will be largely dependent on where you go and the elevation at which you travel
Storm Precipitation Totals as of Friday Afternoon
Hurricane Ridge: 2.41â
Mt Baker: 6.52â
Stevens Pass: 2.58â
Snoqualmie Pass: 2.27â
Crystal Mountain: 0.52â
Paradise: 2.23â
White Pass: 0.55â
Washington Pass: 1.05â
Mission Ridge: 0.31â
Mt Hood Meadows: 0.51â
A few big stories stand out in the current snowpack: recent avalanche warnings in the northern zones, persistent slabs in the western areas, and a complex and weak snowpack in the eastern zones.
The northern zone experienced the brunt of this latest weather system. This led to two days of avalanche warnings and at least one large natural avalanche cycle. It's tough to say what the snowpack looks like in areas near and above treeline, but we know those areas received substantial new snow.
Photo: Large natural avalanche at Mt Baker Ski Area during the recent storm. -Mt Baker Ski Patrol
Earlier in the week we began forecasting a new persistent slab in our west-slope zones. A layer of buried surface hoar produced avalanches last Saturday, Sunday, and Monday. How did that layer fair after this recent round of weather? In locations like Mt Baker and Paradise, it was well tested with heavy precipitation. In other locations, less water may not have adequately stressed the weak layer. As visibility improves and more observation come-in the picture may become more clear.
Photo: Large remotely triggered persistent slab avalanche in the Crystal backcountry: Jeremy Allyn
In the eastern zones a complicated and weak snowpack exists. Several persistent weaklayers have plagued these regions most of the winter. Donât expect this to change anytime soon. Snow profiles and snowpack test can give you a glimpse into the persistent layer. Remember, snow profiles cannot prove the absence of a weak layer or that a layer has âhealed.â
Photo: Large remotely triggered slide on buried surface hoar from Christmas above Leavenworth on 12/31: Matt Primomo