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RegisterMar 26th, 2023–Mar 27th, 2023
Banff Yoho Kootenay, Banff, East Side 93N, Kootenay, Lake Louise, LLSA, Sunshine, West Side 93N, Field.
Human triggering of the persistent and deep persistent layers remains the main concern. Watch for a weakening of the snowpack due to solar heating and possible heat triggered cornice failures when the skies clear over the next few days.
A couple of skier triggered avalanches were reported on Saturday in the Massive Mountain and Observation Sub Peak areas. These failed on layers down 25-100 cm and show that human triggering of various buried layers is still possible.
5-10 cm of storm snow sits over buried temperature crusts to 1500 m, sun crusts to ridgetop on solar aspects, and facets on shaded slopes. The midpack in this area has several crust and facet layers 30-110 cm down, that remain a concern in steep terrain. The bottom of the snowpack consists of weak basal facets in many areas, with sudden test failures still occuring on these facets.
Scattered light flurries with a couple cm's of new snow Sunday night into Monday morning. A clearing trend starts mid-day on Monday as a high pressure system moves into the area. Alpine highs between -5 and -8°C with light NW winds are forecast. Clear skies and cool temperatures Monday night with sunshine expected on Tuesday and Wednesday.