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RegisterApr 3rd, 2021–Apr 5th, 2021
North Rockies.
It seems like it is still winter and the snow keeps coming steadily. Expect to see a bit of new snow accumulate through the end of the weekend along with wind blowing from the southwest then northwest. Wind slabs at upper elevations are the main concern.
Saturday Night: Mostly cloudy with scattered flurries, accumulation 3-10 cm. Light to moderate southwest wind. Freezing level 500 m. Alpine temperature -7.
Sunday: Partly cloudy with scattered flurries, accumulation 3-5 cm. Moderate southwest switching to northwest wind. Freezing level 1400 m. Alpine temperature -4.
Monday: Mostly cloudy. Moderate southwest wind. Freezing level 1700 m. Alpine temperature -2.
Tuesday: Cloudy with isolated flurries. Light to moderate southwest wind. Freezing level 1400 m. Alpine temperature -4.
There are no recent reports of avalanche activity, although with recent snow and wind there is likely natural wind slab activity at upper elevations.
Evidence of large storm slab avalanches (size 3) was observed Monday and Tuesday between Sentinel Pass and Chetwynd, likely having released during the storm on the weekend.
10-40 cm of recent snow earlier in the week has been redistributed by strong southwest to northwest wind with wind slabs possible on many aspects and large, fragile cornices along ridgetops. This snow sits on melt freeze crusts at lower elevations and on solar aspects.
A weak layer of facets buried in mid-February may now be found around 120 to 150 cm deep, or shallower in the east of the region and in thin snowpack areas. The most likely place to trigger this layer is where the snowpack is shallow in alpine terrain. Large loads, such a cornice falls or multiple sleds on the same slope often trigger slopes that a single rider couldn't trigger on their own.