The avalanche hazard is generally Low and avalanches are unlikely. But travel in avalanche terrain is never a completely safe game, so watch for the following issues on isolated features:
Wind slabs: With strong west/southwest winds this morning you'll likely find shallow drifts of wind blown snow on lee sides of terrain features. It always amazes me how the wind can find snow to drift - even when the snow surface is icy, hard and worn out.
Early in the afternoon the cold front will arrive with an expected 2-5" of new snow and strong northwest winds. This will create more sensitive drifts along the ridgelines and terrain features. These drifts will be shallow and relatively small - however, they will be easy to trigger. Shallow drifts of wind blown snow can be very consequential if you're in extreme terrain where even a small avalanche can have disastrous consequences.
Deep slab: If you’re wondering what happened to the Deep Slab avalanche problem, catch up with Mark’s great video. The issue and the weak layers are not gone, rather they are currently dormant and avalanching on these deeper weak layers is unlikely.
I really like this video below from professional skier Greg Hill explaining his strategy on changing conditions. This is especially true in the spring time where conditions change minute by minute.