Hatcher Pass
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Yesterday’s sneaker storm accumulated approximately 12″ of new snow at 3000′. Combined with 3″ of new snow on 12/17 this totals 15″ this week.
Storm Slab and Dry Loose will be likely to human trigger today. Persistent Slabs will be possible to human trigger today. Natural avalanches are unlikely today.
Red flags for avalanche danger include, recent avalanches, shooting cracks, and whumphing.
With all this new snow brings excitement to play in the mountains. To offset this human factor risk we will be making conservative decisions in avalanche terrain. Careful snowpack evaluation and cautious route-finding will be essential.
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| Travel Advice | Generally safe avalanche conditions. Watch for unstable snow on isolated terrain features. | Heightened avalanche conditions on specific terrain features. Evaluate snow and terrain carefully; identify features of concern. | Dangerous avalanche conditions. Careful snowpack evaluation, cautious route-finding, and conservative decision-making essential. | Very dangerous avalanche conditions. Travel in avalanche terrain not recommended. | Extraordinarily dangerous avalanche conditions. Avoid all avalanche terrain. |
| Likelihood of Avalanches | Natural and human-triggered avalanches unlikely. | Natural avalanches unlikely; human-triggered avalanches possible. | Natural avalanches possible; human-triggered avalanches likely. | Natural avalanches likely; human-triggered avalanches very likely. | Natural and human-triggered avalanches certain. |
| Avalanche Size and Distribution | Small avalanches in isolated areas or extreme terrain. | Small avalanches in specific areas; or large avalanches in isolated areas. | Small avalanches in many areas; or large avalanches in specific areas; or very large avalanches in isolated areas. | Large avalanches in many areas; or very large avalanches in specific areas. | Very large avalanches in many areas. |
Yesterday some small natural storm slab avalanches were observed just after the storm on steep gulley sidewalls.

Unknown location, storm snow avalanche from 12/18. At this time we are unsure if this was within the boundaries of our forecast zone.
| Signal Word | Size (D scale) | Simple Descriptor |
| Small | 1 | Unlikely to bury a person |
| Large | 2 | Can bury a person |
| Very Large | 3 | Can destroy a house |
| Historic | 4 & 5 | Can destroy part or all of a village |
Yesterday’s storm produced much more snow than expected. The Marmot Snowstake shows 9-10″ of new snow, and our observation yesterday at the IM parking lot was approximately 12″ of new snow.
It will be likely to human trigger storm slabs on slopes 35° and steeper on all aspects at all elevations. Natural avalanches are unlikely.
There is a chance that these avalanches could step down into the persistent slab problem, producing much larger avalanches.
| Signal Word | Size (D scale) | Simple Descriptor |
| Small | 1 | Unlikely to bury a person |
| Large | 2 | Can bury a person |
| Very Large | 3 | Can destroy a house |
| Historic | 4 & 5 | Can destroy part or all of a village |
Small to large loose dry avalanches will be likely to trigger on steep slopes, 40° and steeper, on all aspects at all elevations. Some small natural activity is possible.
12″ to 15″ of low density snow from yesterday and 12/17 is now sitting on weak faceted surfaces and/or firm bed surfaces.
Avoid steep slopes above terrain traps. These avalanches will be capable of sweeping you off your feet and carrying you into terrain traps, compounding the hazard.
| Signal Word | Size (D scale) | Simple Descriptor |
| Small | 1 | Unlikely to bury a person |
| Large | 2 | Can bury a person |
| Very Large | 3 | Can destroy a house |
| Historic | 4 & 5 | Can destroy part or all of a village |
The persistent slab is still present, but now buried under a 12″ of new snow.
It will be possible to human trigger small to large persistent slab avalanches on slopes 35º and steeper, where stiff snow overlies old, weak, sugary snow. Natural persistent slab avalanche activity is unlikely.
This problem will be found predominately near upper elevation ridgelines, on SW to NE aspects, but also exists in a more patchy distribution throughout Hatcher Pass.
For more information on the persistent slab problem please read Saturdays forecast.