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The avalanche danger remains MODERATE today above 1000’. Human triggered slab avalanches are still possible in steep terrain that has seen prior wind effect due to a layer of weak snow, buried 1-2’ deep. Evaluate the snowpack and terrain carefully. Give cornices a wide berth, limit time spent under glide cracks and watch your sluff.
The avalanche danger is LOW below 1000’.
SUMMIT LAKE: This area was more impacted by the NW wind event on Sunday and Monday with natural avalanches observed. There are multiple buried weak layers in the snowpack. Extra caution is advised. Choose terrain carefully.
LOST LAKE/SNUG/SEWARD: With recent snow, strong winds and buried weak snow, large avalanches may be triggered by a person on skis or snowmachine in these areas as well.
Travel Advice | Generally safe avalanche conditions. Watch for unstable snow on isolated terrain features. | Heightened avalanche conditions on specific terrain features. Evaluate snow and terrain carefully; identify features of concern. | Dangerous avalanche conditions. Careful snowpack evaluation, cautious route-finding, and conservative decision-making essential. | Very dangerous avalanche conditions. Travel in avalanche terrain not recommended. | Extraordinarily dangerous avalanche conditions. Avoid all avalanche terrain. |
Likelihood of Avalanches | Natural and human-triggered avalanches unlikely. | Natural avalanches unlikely; human-triggered avalanches possible. | Natural avalanches possible; human-triggered avalanches likely. | Natural avalanches likely; human-triggered avalanches very likely. | Natural and human-triggered avalanches certain. |
Avalanche Size and Distribution | Small avalanches in isolated areas or extreme terrain. | Small avalanches in specific areas; or large avalanches in isolated areas. | Small avalanches in many areas; or large avalanches in specific areas; or very large avalanches in isolated areas. | Large avalanches in many areas; or very large avalanches in specific areas. | Very large avalanches in many areas. |
Signal Word | Size (D scale) | Simple Descriptor |
Small | 1 | Unlikely to bury a person |
Large | 2 | Can bury a person |
Very Large | 3 | Can destroy a house |
Historic | 4 & 5 | Can destroy part or all of a village |
With clearing skies and light winds, travel into the upper elevation terrain will be appealing today. While there is plenty of soft snow to enjoy it will important to pay attention to and look for past wind-loading. This might take a bit of investigation due to the few inches of snow that fell Tuesday night without wind. The goal is to avoid steep slopes with the prior loading. There is a weak layer of snow (surface hoar and near surface facets) that formed early last week that was subsequently buried by the snow that fell at the end of the week. After the snow there was wind from both the east and the west which formed wind slabs over the weak layer on different aspects. Over the weekend there were human triggered wind slab avalanches and a couple of natural avalanches in Summit Lake on Monday. As time has passed since the wind-loading and because of the type of weak layer, we are now dealing with a persistent slab issue. The most suspect areas are loaded slopes at higher elevations. Keep in mind that the amount of snow that fell was also really variable across the forecast area. As you choose where is go today it will be important to determine whether the wind formed a slab of stiffer snow above the weak layer or not and how deep the slab is. As you travel is the snow loose and sugary or stiff and supportable? Do you sink into soft snow on your skis or snowmachine or not? Be on the lookout for signs of instability like cracking, whumpfing. Also know that signs of instability may not be present even though avalanche danger lingers when you are dealing with a persistent weak layer in the snowpack. Slab or no slab? That is the question to answer as you travel today!
Loose snow avalanches (sluffs): Sluffs are likely to be high volume and fast running. They could entrain the few inches of new snow as well as the faceted snow that sits below it. These could have serious consequences if they carry you into terrain traps like cliffs, trees, or rocks.
Cornices: Large cornices are peeling away from ridgelines and cracks are opening. Be sure to give them plenty of space along the ridge and minimize the amount of time you spend below them.
Glide cracks exist across the forecast area. Remember it is important to limit time spent underneath them. Glide avalanches are totally unpredictable, not triggered by people and are the entire snowpack sliding at the ground. This type of avalanche could be large and unsurvivable if you happened to be in wrong place when one releases. If you see recent glide activity please let us know.
Yesterday: Skies were mostly cloudy in the morning becoming partly cloudy in the afternoon with areas valley fog. Winds were light and westerly and temperatures were in the teens to mid 20°Fs. Overnight skies were partly cloudy, winds were calm and temperatures were in the single digits to mid teens.
Today: Skies will be partly cloudy becoming mostly sunny in the afternoon with some continued valley fog. Winds will be light and northwesterly and temperatures will be in the teens to mid 20°Fs. Overnight skies will be partly cloudy with calm winds and temperatures in the single digits to low teens.
Tomorrow: Skies will be mostly cloudy with a chance of snow showers in the afternoon and evening. Temperatures will be in the 20°Fs and winds will be light and easterly. Looking ahead to the weekend the clouds will move out on Saturday with some sunshine in the forecast for afternoon and on Sunday.
PRECIPITATION 24-hour data (6am – 6am)
Temp Avg (F) | Snow (in) | Water (in) | Snow Depth (in) | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Center Ridge (1880′) | 14 | 0 | 0 | 121 |
Summit Lake (1400′) | 12 | 0 | 0 | 45 |
Alyeska Mid (1700′) | 13 | 0 | 0 | 107 |
RIDGETOP 24-hour data (6am – 6am)
Temp Avg (F) | Wind Dir | Wind Avg (mph) | Wind Gust (mph) | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Sunburst (3812′) | 13 | SW | 4 | 20 |
Seattle Ridge (2400′) | 16 | VAR | 2 | 8 |
Date | Region | Location | Observer |
---|---|---|---|
05/13/24 | Turnagain | Observation: Eddie’s, Sunburst, Seattle, Cornbiscuit, Pete’s South | H Thamm |
05/13/24 | Turnagain | Observation: Turnagain Pass non-motorized side | Amy Holman |
05/12/24 | Turnagain | Observation: Warm up Bowl | Tony Naciuk |
05/07/24 | Turnagain | Observation: Turnagain Pass Wet Slabs | A S |
04/29/24 | Turnagain | Avalanche: Turnagain aerial obs | Tully Hamer |
04/27/24 | Turnagain | Observation: Johnson Pass | Noah Mery |
04/23/24 | Turnagain | Observation: Turnagain Sunny Side | Travis SMITH |
04/21/24 | Turnagain | Observation: Bertha Creek | Anonymous |
04/20/24 | Turnagain | Avalanche: Spokane Creek | Schauer/ Mailly Forecaster |
04/16/24 | Turnagain | Observation: Cornbiscuit | Krueger / Matthys Forecaster |
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