Register for an account and never miss a forecast again!
RegisterRegister for an account and never miss a forecast again!
RegisterMar 16th, 2016–Mar 17th, 2016
Mt Hood.
A mixed bag of avalanche problems Thursday will keep heightened avalanche conditions in specific terrain. You can mitigate the loose wet and cornice risk by being aware of the terrain your connected with and by recognizing the rapidly increasing hazard in locations that warm quickly. Also, wind slabs may continue to be sensitive above treeline.
Sunshine and moderating temperatures should be the story on Thursday. However, cool easterly winds at the mid-mountain level should locally keep rising freezing levels in check on Mt. Hood.
Still, mid-March sunshine will affect solar slopes by increasing the likelihood of loose wet avalanches on steeper solar aspects by quickly breaking down sun or melt-freeze crusts. While most loose wet avalanches should be small, they will have the ability to entrain recent moist snow in specific terrain. Recently formed cornices have grown large and should become more sensitive with warming and sunshine. You can mitigate the loose wet and cornice risk by being aware of the terrain your connected with and by recognizing the rapidly increasing hazard in locations that warm quickly.
Northwest winds on Wednesday likely continued to build wind slab on lee aspects in the upper elevations of the above treeline band. Wind slab will mostly likely be found on N-SE facing slopes. Firm wind transported snow and snowpack cracking can be good signs of wind slab instabilities. Treat wind-loaded slopes in higher terrain with caution Thursday.
Weather and Snowpack
Storms have moved across the Northwest at a nearly daily frequency the past few weeks with fluctuating but generally moderate snow levels. Two deep surface low-pressure systems moved across the Olympic Peninsula last week with the first passing last Thursday, March 10th and the next on Sunday, March 13th. These systems caused very stormy weather.
Cool and showery weather Monday through early Wednesday morning along with continuing moderate westerly winds deposited additional snow at lower snow levels.
Snowfall totals on Mt Hood have been impressive over the last 4 days with about 4 feet of new snow accumulating through early Wednesday morning at the NWAC Mt. Hood Meadows and Timberline stations!
The mid and lower snow pack at Mt Hood should generally be a stable mix of crusts and layers of moist and rounded snow crystals.
Recent Observations
The Mt Hood Meadows pro-patrol on Sunday reported stormy conditions with widespread wind and storm slab of 6-12 inches on all aspects in the area, easily triggered by ski cuts and running on the crust buried on Thursday.
On Monday and again Tuesday, control performed by Mt. Hood Meadows pro-patrol produced extensive and sensitive wind and storm slab avalanches triggered by ski cuts in lower elevation slopes and explosives in wind loaded terrain. Avalanches were greatest on N-E facing terrain. Loose wet slides were releasing on solar aspects by Tuesday afternoon below treeline.
On Wednesday, Meadows patrol were still finding hard wind slab of up to a foot above treeline on the usual lee aspects with a rising hazard of loose wet avalanches in steeper terrain below treeline due to warming and sunbreaks.