Ski Conditions

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Ski Conditions

Hi all,

I just finished 4 days of ski touring guiding in the Rogers Pass area. We toured in Connaught creek, the Illecillewaet valley, Asulkan and the Loop Brook area over this period. We took advantage of the good weather conditions to ski glaciated and supported alpine terrain to 40deg. There were heaps of other folks out there enjoying the current conditions and as a results there are a lot of tracks! The ski quality was good to excellent on Northerly aspects with some wind affect at ridge top however, there is now a breakable sun crust on most southerly aspects. The snow pack is recovering from the recent storm cycle and adjusting to the new load. We noticed two main layers of concerns in the upper snowpack; a storm interface down about 40cm and the February 10th layer down 60-80cm. Both these layer generally gave moderate to hard shear results. We measured an average height of snow of 275cm at treeline. The height of snow on the Illecillewaet Glacier at 2150m was 300+cm and 400+cm at 2300m on the protected Bonney Glacier. We did not observe any signs of instability (whumpfing or cracking). The solar radiations from the last few days triggered several dry/wet avalanches to size 2 on steep solar aspects, the most recent slab avalanches were from Monday. Of note, all the low elevation access trails are hard and icy making for sections of technical skinning. Also, there are many open creeks sections below treeline making for challenging crossing in some areas. This will likely deteriorate as Spring evolve.

Great mid-winter Spring skiing conditions!

Cheers,

David Lussier
acmg mountain guide
http://summitmountainguides.com/

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These observations and opinions are those of the person who submitted them. The ACMG and its members take no responsibility for errors, omissions, or lapses in continuity. Conditions differ greatly over time and space due to the variable nature of mountain weather and terrain. Application of this information provides no guarantee of increased safety. Do not use the Mountain Conditions Report as the sole factor in planning trips or making decisions in the field.