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RegisterJan 26th, 2023–Jan 27th, 2023
Kootenay Boundary, Bonnington, Kootenay Pass, Norns, Rossland, South Okanagan, Ymir, Moyie, St. Mary.
Snowfall amounts will vary throughout the region. Storm snow will be covering a variety of near-surface weak layers and deeper buried weak layers.
Be mindful that even sluffing could have a "domino effect" and produce large avalanches.
Mellow terrain with fewer consequences will be the best option until things settle.
Wednesday's avalanche activity was made up of wind slabs and persistent slabs that were triggered naturally and with the use of explosives.
Although persistent and deep persistent avalanches have been on the decline, the recent and upcoming change in weather may change this.
New snow will be falling on a snowpack that within its top 50 cm contains several layers that could pose a threat with this new load.
Faceted snow, surface hoar (3 to 10 mm), and a crust are already buried 10 to 20 cm down. The surface hoar is found in sheltered areas up to 2200 m and the crust is present on steep solar aspects. At high elevations, new snow will be covering up older wind slabs.
A freezing rain or rime crust buried on January 18 now sits about 15 to 30 cm deep. More layers of concern (crusts, facets, and surface hoar) can be found in the upper snowpack between 30 to 50 cm down. They have yet to produce avalanche activity but they are something to keep an eye on.
Our main layers of concern include a surface hoar layer developed in early January, down roughly 50 to 70 cm, and a melt-freeze crust from late December that is now down approximately 70-90 cm. These layers are responsible for our persistent slab problem.
Our deep persistent slab problem stems from a weak layer created in mid-November and it is now buried 100 to 190 cm deep. These layers are a major concern and can produce large or even very large avalanches with human or machine triggers.
Thursday Night
Cloudy, up to 14 cm accumulation focused mostly in the western area of our region, winds southwest 20 to 30 km/h, treeline temperatures -4 C and freezing levels up to 1500 m.
Friday
Mostly cloudy, up to 7 cm accumulation in the eastern of the region winds northwest 15 km/h gusting to 40, treeline temperatures around -5 C.
Saturday
Increasing sun, trace accumulation ending in the morning, winds northeast 15 to 30 km/h, treeline temperatures -15 C.
Sunday
Sunny with some cloud, no accumulation, winds north 10 to 20 km/h, treeline temperatures -18 C.
More details can be found in the Mountain Weather Forecast.