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RegisterMar 12th, 2017–Mar 13th, 2017
Mt Hood.
Mother Nature will throw a lot of serious avalanche problems at us again on Monday. The exact outcome of the snow, rain and warmer temperatures is hard to predict but we have to expect multiple types of potentially large or very large avalanches. Very dangerous avalanche conditions are expected in the above treeline areas at Mt Hood on Monday and travel in avalanche terrain is not recommended in these areas. Careful snowpack evaluation and cautious routefinding will be required in other areas.
A front should sag slowly south over the Northwest on Monday. Waves of moisture moving along the front should cause a very wet day in the Olympics and Cascades. Periods of moderate to heavy rain or snow should be heaviest along the Cascade west slopes with rising snow levels. The heavier rain may not reach Mt Hood until Monday afternoon.
Mother Nature will throw a lot of serious avalanche problems at us again on Monday. The exact outcome of the snow, rain and warmer temperatures is hard to predict but we have to expect multiple types of potentially large or very large avalanches.
Loose wet avalanches are very likely during intense wet snow or rain.
Wet slab avalanches are most likely in areas of intense rainfall where rain lubricates layers in the snowpack. Glide cracks can indicate areas where wet slab avalanches are likely.
Avoid areas on ridges where there are potential cornices and slopes below cornices. Cornices will be weakened and prone to failure on Monday due to loading by wet snow and rain and warm temperatures.Large cornices have been reported from many areas and have been involved in recent accidents and close calls.
Very dangerous avalanche conditions are expected in the above treeline areas at Mt Hood on Monday and travel in avalanche terrain is not recommended in these areas. Careful snowpack evaluation and cautious routefinding will be required in other areas.
Weather and Snowpack
The first week or so of March was very cool and snowy. NWAC stations at Mt Hood piled up about 6-7 ft of snow.
A strong frontal system brought increasing precipitation and winds along with a warming trend to the Cascades on Thursday. On Thursday night rain pushed up to about 7000 feet at Mt Hood. By Friday morning NWAC stations at Mt Hood had about 1.6 in of WE but alas only rain to show for it. This gave the snowpack a huge test and caused an avalanche cycle at Mt Hood.
Another front crossed the Cascades on Saturday causing more SW-W winds, snow at higher elevations, and rain at low elevations. NWAC stations at Mt Hood had about 2-6 in of new snow on Sunday morning with the most on the upper mountain.
Recent Observations
The Meadows patrol on Thursday reported that rainfall was saturating the upper snowpack allowing several feet of boot penetration by mid-day.
NWAC observer Laura Green was out on Friday and reported new large cornice triggered slab avalanches in White River Canyon on SE aspects in the 6500-8500 ft range, and in Heather Canyon on a NE aspect in the 6100-6800 ft range. Very large debris was seen from new avalanches in Newton Canyon. Laura reports that in the 5200-6600 ft range the upper snowpack of 4F wet and some lower density drier layers.