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RegisterFeb 13th, 2021–Feb 14th, 2021
Northwest Coastal.
Shifting wind direction and potential for new snow will keep danger elevated on Sunday. There may be potential for wide propagation on bigger terrain features.
SATURDAY NIGHT- Overcast, 2-5 cm, moderate to strong south west wind / low near -10
SUNDAY - Overcast, 5-15 cm, strong south west wind, highs near -9
MONDAY - Cloudy, flurries, moderate to strong west wind, -8
TUESDAY- Cloudy, trace snow amounts, moderate north west wind, high near -5
In the Terrace vicinity, recent natural wind slabs to size 2 have been reported on various wind loaded and cross loaded aspects. Wind slabs were also reactive to human triggering with ski cuts in the size 1-1.5 range.
On Friday in the far north and in the south of the region, a few natural size 3 avalanches from big features occurred.
On Tuesday wind slabs up to size 2 were reported by various operators. The northern part of the region had the biggest reported events with windslabs up to size 2.5 on the late January interface.
On Monday, skiers were able trigger unsupported pillows failing on surface hoar down 25-40 cm near Terrace.
Outflow winds have built wind slabs (where snow is just not sublimating) and reverse loading features. Hard slabs, scoured slopes and sastrugi will be present where outflow effects were the strongest. In more sheltered zones, reactive wind slabs will be found on a variety of aspects and elevations due to terrain effects and the variable wind directions.
Cold temperatures are encouraging surface faceting of the upper snowpack. The late January interface is down 30-70 cm, this consists of surface hoar in sheltered locations, a crust on solar features, and facets and stiff wind affected snow at upper elevations. Below treeline, 10-30 cm of snow sits above isolated pockets of surface hoar and a crust that is more prominent on solar aspects.
The mid-pack seems to be well settled. Deep persistent layers appear to have mostly become unreactive, with the exception of the Bear Pass area and the far reaches south of Kitimat.