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RegisterApr 10th, 2021–Apr 11th, 2021
South Columbia.
Wind slabs may remain sensitive to triggering Sunday. The sun can pack a punch at this time of year and the new snow will be particularly sensitive to it. Be ready to back off sunny slopes before the snow surface is moist or wet.
A ridge of high pressure sets up over the province. Freezing levels are forecast to steadily rise through the week.
Saturday night: Clearing. Wind easing to light northwest. Alpine temperature around -12. Freezing level valley bottom.
Sunday: Mix of sun and cloud. Light northeast wind. Alpine temperature around -7. Freezing level 1400 m.
Monday: Mix of sun and cloud. Light to moderate northeast wind. Alpine temperature around -5. Freezing level 1600 m.
Tuesday: Mix of sun and cloud. Light to moderate northeast wind. Alpine temperature around -6. Freezing level 2000 m.
Wind slabs have shown quite limited reactivity in the last couple of days, a few natural and ski cut size 1-1.5 were observed on Saturday. On Friday, most activity in the recent snow was limited to loose dry sluffing.
A couple of natural cornice failures size 2.5 observed Thursday did not trigger slabs on slopes below.
Neighboring Glacier National Park reported a few very large (size 3-4) glide slab releases on Thursday. Glide slabs are hard to predict and can release at any time so it is important to avoid slopes with glide cracks.
On Tuesday, a natural size 3.5 wet slab was reported from an S-SW aspect at 2500 m to 1800 m along with numerous wet loose avalanches up to size 1. We can expect more activity like this in the heat next week.
20-40 cm of recent snow may have formed pockets of wind slab on leeward slopes and behind terrain features. On North aspects in the alpine, the recent snow sits on dry wintery snow surfaces and possibly surface hoar on wind-sheltered slopes. Elsewhere, it sits on a series of melt-freeze crusts on all aspects below 1900 m and southerly aspects to mountain top. Reports indicate snow is bonding well at these interfaces.
The recent warm weather is expected to have helped old persistent weak layers heal, including a few crusts buried over the last month as well as a facet layer 150 cm deep from the mid-February cold snap.