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RegisterFeb 12th, 2015–Feb 13th, 2015
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The primary avalanche problems Friday will continue to be loose wet avalanches and lingering wind slab on lee aspects near and above treeline.
Mild snow levels will prevail again on Thursday with light rain and snow developing for the central east and northeast Cascades. There may be a few sunbreaks for the southeast Washington Cascades Thursday. Thursday should be a few degrees warmer than Wednesday along the east slopes.
Loose wet avalanches are possible Thursday on steeper slopes below and near treeline that either receive enough rainfall, or in areas further south, solar aspects that receive substantial sun breaks. If neither happen, the loose wet avalanche potential would be minimal.
Expect a lower regional danger further from the crest in the central and southeast Cascades due to patchy snow cover.
As a result of the overall low snowpack, especially below treeline, watch for terrain hazards such as open creeks, partially covered rocks and vegetation.
A series of fronts in a strong warm and wet southwesterly flow crossed the Northwest late last week. The east slopes have seen quite a variety of weather and snow conditions. The Harts Pass Snotel and the NWAC Washington Pass weather station's total snow gages indicate about a foot of snow during this period. Other areas east of the crest have had less snow or rain.
NWAC pro-observer Tom Curtis was at Dirty Face Peak on Saturday and found small roller balls in recent snow with no recent avalanches and no signs of instability. The North Cascade Mountain Guides were at Washington Pass on Sunday and found 30-40 cm of storm snow with touchy 6 inch storm slab above 7000 ft. They also reported lots of small loose wet avalanches at lower elevations.
The North Cascade Mountain Guides near Washington Pass on Monday also reported a size 1.5 20-30 cm deep x 25 m wide wind slab on a north slope that was remotely triggered from a shallow spot with facets near rocks. So there is definitely still some variability out there.
Regarding the potential January 15th persistent slab combo in the northeast Cascades zone; NWAC pro-observers and North Cascade Guide reports as recently as Feb. 10th have found the January 15th facet/crust layers at 1 m below the surface on a north aspects of Silverstar Mt 6600 ft with the facets, starting to turn to rounded grains and not reactive or not releasing in pit tests. The January 15th facet/crust layers are stabilizing and becoming very unlikely for a human to trigger. A very large natural avalanche that may have run on this layer east of Washington Pass was likely tied to heavier precipitation/warming from last week's event.