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RegisterFeb 20th, 2021–Feb 21st, 2021
South Rockies.
Reactive wind slabs have formed in lee terrain features with more wind on the away. As winds increase, slabs may form lower on slopes, into open tree line areas, or in other unusual places.
SATURDAY NIGHT: Flurries, trace amounts, moderate southwest wind, temperature low -13 C.
SUNDAY: Cloudy with scattered flurries, 5 cm, strong to extreme southwest wind, temperature high -2 C, freezing level rising to 1700 m.
MONDAY: Snow, 10-15 cm snow with rain at lower elevations, strong to extreme southwest wind, temperature high +1 C, freezing level at 1800 m.
TUESDAY: Pockets of sunshine, light northwest wind, temperature high -8 C, freezing level at 1000 m.
On Friday, skiers easily ski cut fresh size 1 wind slabs. Whumpfing and cracking were reported in wind affected terrain.
Several explosives triggered slab avalanches up to size 2 and several natural and skier triggered dry loose and wind slab avalanches up to size 1.5 were reported on Thursday.
On Tuesday and Wednesday a few wind slab avalanches up to size 2 were triggered by explosives and released naturally.
Several wind slab avalanches up to size 2 were triggered by skiers and released naturally at treeline and in the alpine on Monday. Human triggered avalanches were reported north of Crowsnest Pass. The avalanches were triggered on east aspects on mellow slopes in the alpine and at the treeline/alpine interface (see this MIN report). The failure plane of these avalanches is likely the late January persistent weak layer consisting of surface hoar, sugary facets or a crust/facet combination.
Wind slabs are found in open areas, moderate to strong winds are redistributing 5-15 cm recent snow. This overlies wind affected snow surfaces in the alpine and open areas at treeline and a facet layer which is up to 20-30 cm thick in sheltered areas. A persistent weak layer lurks 40-65 cm below the surface. In some places it consists of surface hoar, in other places just facets, or crust/facet combinations.
A solid mid-pack sits above deeply buried decomposing crust and facet layers near the bottom of the snowpack. Though unreactive under the current conditions, steep rocky slopes and shallow snowpacks should still be approached with caution.