THIS AVALANCHE FORECAST EXPIRED ON February 10, 2018 @ 12:15 am
Avalanche Forecast published on February 9, 2018 @ 7:15 am
Issued by Chris Bilbrey - Flathead Avalanche Center

Whitefish Range

How to read the forecast

Continued snowfall allows for dangerous avalanche conditions to prevail as you gain elevation. Slopes with weak layers may produce very large and destructive avalanches capable of traveling to valley bottom. Use patience and conservative route-finding as our snowpack adjust to the new load. Be aware of overhead hazards when traveling up in elevation. Generally safer and more stable snow is found at lower elevations.

3. Considerable

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Above 6500 ft.
Dangerous avalanche conditions. Careful snowpack evaluation, cautious route-finding and conservative decision-making essential.

2. Moderate

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5000-6500 ft.
Heightened avalanche conditions on specific terrain features. Evaluate snow and terrain carefully; identify features of concern.

1. Low

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3500-5000 ft.
Generally safe avalanche conditions. Watch for unstable snow on isolated terrain features.
    Dangerous avalanche conditions. Careful snowpack evaluation, cautious route-finding and conservative decision-making essential.
  • 1. Low
  • 2. Moderate
  • 3. Considerable
  • 4. High
  • 5. Extreme
Avalanche Problem 1: Storm Slab
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Yesterday’s snowfall of approx. 2”/ 0.3” SWE and 48-hour snowfall totals ranging 4-7”/ 0.5-0.8” SWE in the Whitefish Range have formed widespread storm slabs. These slabs are more sensitive during and in the days following a storm. Surface cracking is bulls-eye data that storm slabs are sensitive to human triggering and could fail naturally in steep, wind-loaded terrain. Evaluate storm totals and freezing levels before going into steeper terrain while avoiding lens shaped pillows.  

Avalanche Problem 2: Persistent Slab
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Over the past two weeks, 2 to 4 foot hard slabs formed on some slopes burying multiple rain crust and wind-stiffened slabs. These rain crust and wind slabs could harbor small grain facets that most likely formed during the roller coaster battle of warm, Pacific air and cold arctic air during our last two storms. On Tuesday night, a snowcat triggered a persistent slab avalanche along the Werner Peak road burrying the machine under 8 to 10' of debris. The snowpack is still recovering from two, back-to-back loading events and management of this problem is to avoid steep, un-supported slopes with convexities and stick to lower angle, well-supported slopes.

Avalanche Problem 3: Deep Slab
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Basal facets and the Thanksgiving facet/ crust layer is now buried under an 4-6+ foot dense, hard slab. Several deep slabs, estimated 8 to 12’ thick, ran after our 6” SWE loading event earlier this week in neighbooring ranges. Nearly an inch of rain at lower elevations and close to an inch of SWE in the Whitefish Range over the past 48-hours is adding more load and stress to these lurking weak layers. These slab avalanches are capable of reaching their historic runouts and will kill anyone in them. Weak layers near the ground are most reactive on high elevation slopes with likely trigger locations near shallow areas of the overlying slab or near rock outcrops. Conservative terrain selection at upper elevations is the approach to this unpredictable, deadly problem.

Forecast discussion

Our recent storm cycle is coming to an end but not after we received another hefty snow and rain load stressing numerous buried weak layers in our snowpack. 48-hour storm totals range from 10-20”/ 2-3” SWE in the Swan and Flathead Ranges as well, southern GNP and lesser amounts along with higher rain levels in the Whitefish Range. The snowpack will need time to recover from this one-two-punch which produced several large avalanches earlier this week and I suspect that more ran yesterday and overnight.

Colder temperatures and the return to snow versus rain at lower elevations will improve the stability but make for some scary and challenging riding conditions at lower elevations. Storm slabs at mid and upper elevations will be more sensitive to human triggering and could fail naturally, especially in steep, wind-loaded terrain. Our persistent and deep persistent slab problems are still a lower likelihood, but high consequence event that is nothing to mess with. Give a wide berth when traveling around or below large, high elevations slopes as these problems behave in unpredictable and erratic ways. Treat all slopes as if they could avalanche until proven otherwise and remember that good habits save lives.  

Weather and CURRENT CONDITIONS
weather summary

Cold front moved to our southwest overnight spurring widespread, light snowfall throughout the forecast area. At 4 am, light northwest flow is observed over northwest Montana and the focus of precipitation shifts to our south today. Weak high pressure builds over the region for Saturday and Sunday with clearing skies and cold temperatures. The next shot of precipitation arrives Sunday night with overall light accumulations expected.

Two-Day Mountain Weather Forecast Produced in partnership with the Missoula NWS
For 5000 ft. to 7000 ft.
Friday Friday Night Saturday
Cloud Cover: AM snow Cloudy to broken skies Clear to partly cloudy
Temperatures: 10 to 15 deg. F. -10 to -5 deg. F. 17 to 23 deg. F.
Wind Direction: NE N W
Wind Speed: 5 to 10 mph, gusting to 15 mph 5 to 10 mph 5 to 10 mph
Snowfall: 0 to 1 in. 0 in. 0 in.
Snow Line:
Disclaimer

This advisory applies only to backcountry areas outside established ski area boundaries. This advisory describes general avalanche conditions and local variations always occur. This advisory expires at midnight on the posted day unless otherwise noted. The information in this advisory is provided by the USDA Forest Service who is solely responsible for its content.