Lower Valais
Dangerous conditions. High to very high danger — backcountry travel is not recommended.
In particular on wind-protected shady slopes, fresh snow is falling on a snow surface which is faceted in many places and sometimes also on surface hoar. Deeper layers of the snowpack are relatively well consolidated in the extreme west of Lower Valais and on the northern flank of the Alps. South of a line from the Rhône to the Rhine, the entire snowpack is often faceted and loose. Where fresh and drifted snow is deposited on this weak snowpack, avalanches can start deeper in the snowpack.
Given ongoing snowfall, even relatively large avalanches are increasingly to be expected in the west. These can entrain fresh snow in their track. However, as there is still little lying snow overall, avalanches will remain within known avalanche tracks.
Conditions were overcast and there was snowfall in the west and north. The snowfall level was at low altitudes in the morning and slowly rose during the day.
From Wednesday evening to Thursday afternoon above approximately 1200 m:
At midday at 2000 m, between -3°C in the northwest and -7°C in the southeast.
Moderate to strong south to southwesterly
In the west and north, conditions will be mostly overcast with further snowfall. Overnight in the north, the snowfall level will temporarily rise to between 1400 and 1600 m before falling back down to around 800 m during the day. In Ticino, central and southern Grisons there will be variable cloud cover with occasional general precipitation from the north.
From Thursday afternoon to Friday afternoon above approximately 1600 m:
At midday at 2000 m, around -6°C in the north and -4°C in the south
High-altitude winds will slowly veer to the northwest. A barrier effect will develop on the northern flank of the Alps. In the west and north, there will be snowfall down to low altitudes, with the heaviest falls overnight from Saturday to Sunday. Over the two days, a total of 30 to 50 cm of fresh snow is again expected in Lower Valais and on the northern flank of the Alps, and 15 to 30 cm in Upper Valais and northern Grisons. Winds will be strong to storm force from westerly to northwesterly directions.
Avalanche risk will continue to increase somewhat in many places. In those regions exposed to heavier precipitation on the northern flank of the Alps and in Valais, naturally triggered avalanches, some very large, are to be expected. There will be scarcely any change in avalanche risk on the southern flank of the Alps.
Issued
9 Jan 06:37 UTC
Valid until
9 Jan 16:00 UTC
Next update
9 Jan 16:00 UTC
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