Forecast for the Skyline Area Mountains

Brett Kobernik
Issued by Brett Kobernik on
Sunday morning, January 31, 2016

The majority of the terrain has a LOW to MODERATE avalanche danger. However, a CONSIDERABLE avalanche danger does exist in the higher steep north through east facing terrain. The danger will increase into Monday if we get the high end of the forecast snow totals.

Low
Moderate
Considerable
High
Extreme
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Weather and Snow

Most areas along the Skyline have picked up about 6 inches of new snow with a few stations from Six Mile Canyon and south getting around 10 inches. Northwest wind speeds never really got to crazy and have dropped off now. Temperatures have dropped to around 10 degrees.

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Avalanche Problem #1
Persistent Weak Layer
Type
Location
Likelihood
Size
Description

The new snow won't have changed the avalanche conditions much. There is still a chance that you could trigger a slide that breaks into deeply buried weak layers in the steep north through east facing higher terrain.

Additional Information

We're going to have a cloudy day today as the next storm approaches. Ridgetop high temperatures should be around 20 and westerly winds will remain fairly light. We'll see some snowfall but not much accumulation will add up until tonight and Monday. Wind speeds shift east for a period overnight and then get a bit breezy from the north on Monday. It's looking like we could see another 6 to 12 inches of snow by the time the storm winds down on Tuesday morning.

General Announcements

We will publish full detailed advisories Saturday and Sunday mornings by 7am. We will also be publishing basic avalanche danger ratings & info during the week.

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