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RegisterDec 14th, 2020–Dec 15th, 2020
Cariboos.
The recent snow may not be bonding well to buried weak layers, and could be reactive to human triggers, especially in areas around Blue River and Valemount where these layers are buried deeper.
MONDAY NIGHT - Cloudy with scattered flurries, up to 5 cm / light southwest wind / alpine low temperature near -10
TUESDAY - Cloudy with flurries, 5 cm / southwest wind, 20-40 km/h / alpine high temperature near -6
WEDNESDAY - Cloudy with sunny periods and scattered flurries / southwest wind, 20-40 km/h / alpine high temperature near -7
THURSDAY - Cloudy with flurries / light southwest wind / alpine high temperature near -7
Several large natural avalanches were recently reported at Chappel Creek (see this MIN report). These avalanches occurred on south aspects at treeline elevations. Based on the depth of these avalanches, they likely failed on recently buried surface hoar and/or sun crust layers. These photos suggest a persistent slab avalanche problem may exist, but we are uncertain about the details of this problem. Extra caution should be taken on steep treeline terrain around Blue River and Valemount where there may be enough snow above this weak layer to produce dangerous avalanches.
Otherwise some small wind slab and dry loose avalanches have recently been observed in alpine terrain.
5-10 cm of new snow is expected between Monday night and the end of the day on Tuesday. This new snow likely sits on wind slabs at upper elevations, and a rain crust below treeline. The crust is reported to exist from valley bottom up to 1200-1700 m.
The main concern (and uncertainty) is whether recent snow is bonding to a surface hoar layer and/or sun crusts. In most areas this snow has probably not developed into a concerning slab, with the exception of the Blue River and Valemount areas where there has been more snowfall. The most likely terrain for this problem is around treeline elevations where the snowpack has not been affected by wind or rain (see some good examples in these MIN photos).
A buried rain crust can be found in the lower snowpack (50-100 cm deep) with some reports of weak snow around this crust. While we have not seen recent avalanches on this layer, it continues to produce occasional results in snowpack tests. It may be reactive to human triggers on shallow rocky slopes in the alpine or alpine-like features at treeline.