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RegisterJan 13th, 2022–Jan 14th, 2022
Lizard-Flathead.
Warm temperatures and solar radiation produced very large avalanches on Thursday. Cooler temps and low elevation cloud on Friday should improve things at treeline and below, but in the alpine, warm temperatures and more sunshine will prolong the danger.
Thursday night: Gradually increasing cloud. Freezing level falling to around 1200 m.
Friday: Cloudy up to around 2500 m elevation, which may be thick enough to give some very light precipitation. A layer of warm air (possibly above freezing) will exist above around 2500 m. winds light in the morning, increasing to moderate southwesterly in the afternoon.
Saturday: Mostly cloudy, up to 3 cm new snow, moderate southwesterly winds, treeline high around -2 °C, freezing level around 1400 m.
Sunday: Mostly dry with some clear spells. Moderate southwesterly winds. Freezing level around 1200 m.
Three very large avalanches were reported from this region on Thursday. The avalanches appear to have failed on the early December crust and showed wide propagation. They occurred on southwest to southeast aspects and were naturally triggered in response to rising temperatures and solar radiation.
These avalanches follow a previous sporadic pattern of very large avalanches that have been reported from this region and neighbouring regions over the last couple of weeks.
Recent new snow has settled fast and become dense due to warm temperatures. This snow sits on a variety of old surfaces, including soft snow in sheltered areas and wind slabs in exposed and open areas which formed over the past few days.
The most notable layer of concern in the snowpack is a crust that was formed in early December and is now down 100-270 cm. This layer appeared to "wake up" in response to warm temperatures and solar radiation on Thursday Jan 13, when at least three very large avalanches were reported on this layer. This layer has created a low likelihood, high consequence scenario which is best managed through conservative terrain choices and disciplined backcountry travel techniques.