Friends of the
Northwest Weather & Avalanche Center

Photo courtesy of Mark Moore.


Warning:
Use care and common sense when applying snow stability information, and consult other sources whenever possible. For example: consult the NWAC, ski area or highway department avalanche personnel during the winter or early spring, and talk with Forest Service or Park Service rangers during the later spring and summer. These observations provide an historical framework and general guideline to trends in snow pack stability. You are responsible for using and applying any information. Choice not Chance causes most avalanche accidents. Each report shown is a snapshot of the snowpack structure at a certain time and a certain place. It is a fact that the snow pack is highly variable, very dynamic, and snow structure and related stability can and do change within a few feet and often within a few hours, sometimes dramatically.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Snowpack Information Exchange - Create Report

NWAC photos

NWAC snow profiles

Please write a short account of the significant weather and snow conditions you found on your latest trip. We appreciate information indicating stability as well as instability. This service is not for trip reports. The NWAC may monitor the log for their information.

"Observation" is a brief narrative that includes information regarding weather, slope aspect, elevation, slope angle, snow layer info, how it was obtained, observed avalanches.

EXAMPLE

February 29, 2004, Windy Ridge, 1 mile west of Stevens Pass

N-NW aspects 5-6000 ft, 25-35 degree slopes. Saw recent natural 1-2 ft wind slabs on N-NW exposures from wind transport, seemed to have released on old crust. Kicked off 12-16 inch slab on 36 degree N aspect during ski cut on small roll. In pit on 35 degree N-NW exposure at 5000 ft, got RB-2 at 60 cm, Q1. Easy shovel shears same depth on either low density snow or maybe surface hoar. Avoided steeper terrain, had good powder turns with no signs instability or releases on 25 degree N-NW slopes.

 

Name:


Email: (not required and will not display in report)


Region:




Location, or Area, or Reference to Well Known Landmark:



Activity:


Observation:




Link to NWAC Photos: (paste in the full URL for the photos you submitted, if you know it)




Link to NWAC Snow Profile: (paste in the full URL for the snow profile you submitted, if you know it)