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Thread: BC Interior Special Warning

  1. #1
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    BC Interior Special Warning

    Saw this on another forum. Though it belongs here as well

    The CAC has issued special public avalanche warnings for both of the previous two weekends. We are considering issuing a third warning for the coming weekend and will make the decision later this week. Regardless of whether a special warning is issued, I thought I should give everyone a heads up on conditions.

    The snowpack will remain highly unstable in many of BC's interior mountain ranges through the coming weekend. Areas affected include mountainous backcountry terrain in:
    · The North Rocky Mountains north and east of Prince George, including the mountains around:
    o Mackenzie.
    o Pine Pass.
    o Chetwynd.
    o Tumbler Ridge.
    o Kakwa Recreation Area.
    · The Columbia Mountains (Cariboo, Selkirk, Monashee, and Kootenay Ranges) from Prince George south to the US border between:
    o Quesnel, Williams Lake, 100 Mile House, Kamloops, and the Okanagan Valley on the west, and
    o the Kootenay River, Columbia River/Kinbasket Lake, and Fraser River on the east.
    · The South Coast Mountains:
    o North and east of Pemberton.
    o West of Lilloet and Lytton.

    The upper 100cm of the snowpack has up to five or six embedded weak layers, all of which are buried and out of sight. Any of these layers alone would present a significant challenge but in combination they have produced an extremely complex avalanche problem. These layers are proving to be exceptionally persistent?they have been very active for over two weeks and show no signs of improvement. In fact, conditions are becoming trickier and more complex every day.

    Avalanches are starting naturally with minor changes in weather such as light accumulations of new snow, winds blowing a bit of snow around, warm temperatures, or even just sun shining on a slope when clouds break for a short period. The CAC is receiving daily reports of sledders, skiers, and snowboarders triggering avalanches, often from very low angle terrain (as flat as 15-20 degrees) and sometimes from as far as 50 ? 100 metres away.

    There is no indication avalanche activity is abating. In recent days, avalanche sizes have been increasing. Slides big enough to demolish a pickup truck (size 3) are now occurring regularly. A recent report described avalanches 1000 metres across and running 1000 metres down-slope. These events are not survivable if you are caught in one you trigger yourself, or if one is triggered above you and it runs you down.

    Extensive experience and professional level safety procedures and guidance are required to manage the current avalanche risk. Backcountry recreationists are urged to stay away from avalanche terrain until the snowpack becomes more stable. If you go into the mountains, you can reduce the chance of an avalanche accident by:
    · Staying within ski area boundaries.
    · Cross-country skiing at or near the valley bottom.

    Unless there?s a significant change in weather, the problem will likely persist into the following week, through next weekend, and perhaps longer. Look for up to date information about avalanche safety, education, and conditions at: www.avalanche.ca.

    Please feel free to forward or repost this message freely.

    You can send observations, photos, or comments to: forecaster@avalanche.ca, 250-837-2141 ext. 230.

    You can contact me directly at: kklassen@avalanche.ca, 250-837-2141 ext. 227.

    Karl Klassen
    ACMG/IFMGA Mountain Guide
    Public Avalanche Bulletins Manager
    Canadian Avalanche Centre, Revelstoke
    Last edited by farmer; 03-03-2010 at 02:27 PM.
    Quote Originally Posted by Smoke
    Cell phones are great in the backcountry. If you're injured, you can use them to play Tetris, which helps pass the time while waiting for cold embrace of Death to envelop you.

  2. #2
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    I agree with this. There are so many areas where buried hoar frost layers are perfectly preserved. But wot I find most concerning is how many more people are in the slack country this year compared to the last 2 seasons when the snow pack started the seasons with nasty conditions and many people didn't tour at all. I'm seeing alota newbees out there and now is not the time for them to explore untouched terrain.
    We, the RATBAGGERS, formally axcept our duty is to trigger avalaches on all skiers ...

  3. #3
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    this was mid feb in BSM bowl Fernie on the up track, in the first photo you can see the old skin track that was buried that I set the previous week, I was right on it when it went. While studing it I found a skiing track on the bed surface as well. It was approx 100m wide, upto 60cm deep and thankfully for me only ran 20m. this was taken a week later
    these were taken on the day standing beside the little trees in the middle.



    We had a chute release the same day that got tracked out the previous week, it was the third person that triggered it and he didn't do anything unusual.
    P.S. I hope I'm not trashing your thread.
    We, the RATBAGGERS, formally axcept our duty is to trigger avalaches on all skiers ...

  4. #4
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    Karl,

    Do you see the warmer dry weather this week stabilizing things at all? Thinking about heading to Eagles Pass area on Saturday. Familiar with the area and have "safe" skiing zones.
    www.skevikskis.com Check em out!

  5. #5
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    Quote Originally Posted by el hefe View Post
    Karl,

    Do you see the warmer dry weather this week stabilizing things at all? Thinking about heading to Eagles Pass area on Saturday. Familiar with the area and have "safe" skiing zones.

    I'm not Karl, just x-posting this. He did leave his e-mail at the bottum of that message though. I'll edit the OP to make this clear
    Quote Originally Posted by Smoke
    Cell phones are great in the backcountry. If you're injured, you can use them to play Tetris, which helps pass the time while waiting for cold embrace of Death to envelop you.

  6. #6
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    I was a little surprised that he would post here. haha
    www.skevikskis.com Check em out!

  7. #7
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    Colorado
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    I spent 2 weeks in the Cariboo/Monashees mountains(Feb 05-20).

    I have never seen the snowpack soo sensitive/tricky in 25 years of skiing in B.C.. All the buried surface hoar layers are a real education for this Colorado kid. I was amazed at how far away we triggered slopes. Even realitively low angle slopes.

    Sadly, a friend was killed while ski touring, while I was in B.C. on Wednesday the 17th.

    The old words of, "Lets' be careful out there," really are true.
    "True love is much easier to find with a helicopter"

  8. #8
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    Sorry to hear Halsted. Was the friend killed while ski-touring in BC?

  9. #9
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    Colorado
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    "True love is much easier to find with a helicopter"

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