Register for an account and never miss a forecast again!
RegisterRegister for an account and never miss a forecast again!
RegisterJan 23rd, 2021–Jan 24th, 2021
South Columbia.
Avalanche hazard is improving, stick to good travel habits. Be wary of lurking wind slabs and large cornices.
Saturday night: Increasing cloud / light southwest winds / alpine low temperature -18
Sunday: Mostly cloudy, isolated flurries / light southeast winds / alpine high temperature -10
Monday: Cloudy / light south winds / alpine high temperature -12
Tuesday: Cloudy with isolated flurries / light southeast winds / alpine high temperature -11
Outside of a handful of small size 1 wind slabs, a few cornice failures, and loose dry sluffing in steep and southerly terrain, there have been no recent notable avalanche reports in the region.
With the strong winds last Tuesday, operators in the region reported small to large (size 1-2) wind slabs releasing naturally as well as several size 1-2 explosive-triggered cornices.
Last Monday and Tuesday, several operators in the region reported small (size 1-1.5) human-triggered avalanches releasing on a weak layer of surface hoar on north, east and southeast aspects at treeline and below treeline elevations. These avalanches were breaking 25-45 cm deep.
Previous winds scoured snow surfaces, loaded cornices, and formed stiff wind slabs in the alpine and around treeline. A thin sun crust may be found on steep solar aspects. Clear skies and cold temperatures are encouraging surface hoar growth and surface faceting. Below 1700-1800 m, 20-30 cm of snow is settling above a decomposing melt freeze crust.
Observers continue to find a preserved layer of surface hoar down 50-70 cm in sheltered, open slopes at and below treeline. Recent snowpack tests have produced sudden results on this layer, other tests have found it unreactive, as such it continues to warrant slope-specific assessment.
Deeper in the snowpack, a couple of older persistent weak layers may still be identifiable from late and early December, consisting of surface hoar and a crust with faceted snow and buried anywhere from 100-200 cm deep. Prolonged periods of inactivity and unreactive snowpack test results suggest that these layers have trended towards dormancy.