Avalanche Forecast
Issued: Apr 5th, 2018 4:49PM
The alpine rating is Persistent Slabs and Wind Slabs.
, the treeline rating is , and the below treeline rating is Known problems includeSummary
Confidence
High -
Weather Forecast
The current weather pattern looks more like February than April, but we'll take it! Freezing levels are expected to rise just a bit over the next few days and light daily snowfall should continue through the weekend THURSDAY NIGHT: Freezing level around 500 m, light variable wind, 2 to 5 cm of snow possible.FRIDAY: Broken cloud cover giving way to scattered cloud in the afternoon, freezing level beginning at valley bottom rising to about 1000 m, light southerly wind at treeline, light northwest wind at ridgetop, trace of snow possible. SATURDAY: Broken cloud cover, freezing level beginning at valley bottom rising to around 1000 m, light to moderate southerly wind, 2 to 6 cm of snow possible. SUNDAY: Broken cloud cover, freezing level beginning at valley bottom rising to about 1600 m, light to moderate west/southwest wind, 1 to 3 cm of snow possible.
Avalanche Summary
Reported avalanche activity was limited on Wednesday; a cornice failure produced a size 2 soft slab in steep rocky terrain on an unknown aspect and sluffing was observed in steep terrain to size 1.On Tuesday a small avalanche was triggered by a skier on a northeast facing slope at 2200 m. The size 1 avalanche failed on the late March interface. Control work produced avalanches from size 2 to 3 on north/northeast facing features above 2400 m that likely ran on the late March interface as well.On Saturday a skier triggered a large slab avalanche (size 2.5) on a south aspect at 2600 m. The avalanche failed on a buried sun crust 150-200 cm below the surface. Another large (size 2.5) wind slab released naturally from a steep southeast-facing alpine slope in the St. Mary's area. Explosives control in the northern half of the region produced numerous storm slabs ranging from size 1.5-2.5 at treeline and alpine elevations. Crown fractures ranged from 30-100 cm. All aspects were represented in results, with the majority of activity focused on northeast to northwest aspects in the alpine.
Snowpack Summary
Tuesday night's storm brought up to 8 cm of new snow with very little wind.Storms over the past week brought variable snowfall totals of 20 to 80 cm to the region, with areas to the south of the region seeing the deepest accumulations. This storm snow sits on a persistent weak layer buried in late March that consist of crusts below 1900 m and on south aspects, and surface hoar on shaded aspects at higher elevations. Other slightly deeper surface hoar/facet layers have been reported on shaded aspects at higher elevations and may be found approximately 40 to 90 cm below the surface.Deeper persistent weak layers from mid-late February as well as January and December layers, are still being monitored by professional observers, but are generally considered dormant. Facets also linger at the base of the snowpack.
Problems
Persistent Slabs
Aspects: All aspects.
Elevations: Alpine, Treeline.
Likelihood
Expected Size
Wind Slabs
Aspects: All aspects.
Elevations: Alpine, Treeline.
Likelihood
Expected Size
Valid until: Apr 6th, 2018 2:00PM