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RegisterJan 14th, 2021–Jan 15th, 2021
Northwest Inland.
Some new snow and strong to extreme winds are expected to form fresh wind slabs. Look for low-angle slopes in sheltered terrain for the best, and safest riding.
THURSDAY NIGHT - Flurries, 5 cm / southwest wind, 50-80 km/h, gusting to 100 km/h / alpine low temperature near -5
FRIDAY - Flurries, 5-10 cm / southeast wind, 60-80 km/h / alpine high temperature near -3 / freezing level 1000 m
SATURDAY - Cloudy with flurries, 3-5 cm / southwest wind, 30-60 km/h / alpine high temperature near -3 / freezing level 800 m
SUNDAY - Cloudy with flurries, 3-5 cm / southwest wind, 30-60 km/h / alpine high temperature near -2 / freezing level 1200 m
Wind slabs will likely continue to be reactive on Friday.
There was a report of a natural avalanche cycle up to size 2 from wind loaded terrain in the south of the region on Tuesday.
There were a few explosives triggered size 2 avalanches reported near the southern boundary of the region on Sunday.
On Saturday, explosive control work near Ningunsaw (just outside the region) produced several wind slabs to size 2.5 and one size 3 deep persistent slab failing on weak facets near the base of the snowpack. Another reminder of the "low probability; high consequence" scenario that persistent slab problems often create.
10-15 cm of new snow is expected between Thursday night and Friday afternoon with strong to extreme southwest winds. Fresh wind slabs will be forming in many areas, including at lower elevations.
20-30 cm of recent storm snow may sit on a weak layer of surface hoar that was recently buried at treeline and below treeline.
In the south of the region, another weak layer of surface hoar that was buried around the New Year has been reported down 50-70 cm in sheltered areas.
The lower snowpack has two crusts with potentially weak, faceted snow around them. Reports from the Smithers area suggest the upper crust is 70-140 cm below the surface and has shown signs of being possible to trigger from shallow areas. The deeper crust is near the bottom of the snowpack and is most likely to trigger from steep, rocky slopes, with a shallow or thin to thick snowpack.