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RegisterMar 23rd, 2015–Mar 24th, 2015
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The cool somewhat snowy weather should bring a variety of changeable March snow and avalanche conditions.
Light snow showers may be seen at higher elevations east of the crest on Tuesday with fairly low snow levels.
The cool somewhat snowy weather may bring a variety of changeable March snow and avalanche conditions.
We are past the equinox and the sun is rapidly getting stronger and new snow will be susceptible to sun effects. Watch for possible wet snow deeper than a few inches or snowballing or natural loose wet avalanches by Tuesday midday on solar slopes.
Possible small wind slab may linger on lee slopes mainly ATL. Use extra caution near slope convexities where storm or wind slab avalanches are more likely to be triggered.
Less recent snow and ample terrain anchors should limit the avalanche danger below treeline. Many areas below treeline do not have enough snow to cause an avalanche danger.
The 15-18 inches of snow that fell a week ago mainly in the north Cascades including east of the crest has settled or melted by at least 10 inches and probably been absorbed into the upper snowpack.
Daily warming should have made the upper snowpack mostly homogeneous in most east slope areas.
The storm late last week and over the weekend only deposited light amounts of new snow to most of the east slopes.
The DOT crew working at Washington Pass on Monday stable overall snow conditions and no avalanches with 4-6 inches of recent snow above the pass and about 2 inches at pass level.
Snowdepths vary greatly across the east slopes with a regionally healthy snowpack in the northeast Cascades to bare solar and lower elevation slopes for the central and southeast Cascades.
A weak upper short wave and unstable air mass is moving over the Northwest on Monday. Some light snow showers should make it east of the crest. Another rapidly moving shortwave will carry a surface low across the north Oregon Cascades Monday night. This should renew snow showers Monday night in the south Cascades with possible overnight stormy conditions at Mt Hood.