Central Grisons and Anterior Rhine

Zervreila

Sat 22 Nov Sunrise 08:35 17:43 Light snow

Hard-to-read day. Persistent or gliding-snow problems can mask the real risk.

Day Risk Profile

Moderate
All day

Avalanche Problems

Dry snow level 2 Wind slab + Persistent weak layers dry All day
All aspects
above 2400m
The small quantity of fresh snow and the wind slabs formed by the moderate to strong northeasterly wind are to be evaluated with care and prudence. Especially on steep shady slopes avalanches can be triggered in the weakly bonded old snow and reach medium size in some cases. Apart from the danger of being buried, restraint should be exercised in particular in view of the danger of avalanches sweeping people along and giving rise to falls. The Avalanche Warning Service currently has only a small amount of information that has been collected in the field, so that the avalanche danger should be investigated especially thoroughly in the relevant locality.

Snowpack & Weather

Snowpack

In the last two days, new fallen snow and sometimes strong northeasterly winds have created snowdrift accumulations that are prone to triggering. These are sometimes large in the north, where the most snow fell (up to 50 cm), while in the other regions they are small to medium in size. Deeper in the snowpack, there are faceted weak layers prone to triggering, especially on shady slopes above approximately 2400 m and generally in the high Alpine regions. Avalanches may also be triggered in these deeper layers in places.

Outlook

Sunday

Clouds will gather rapidly in the west on Sunday, while it will remain sunny for longer in the east. The wind will shift to the west and will be strong in the north and west, moderate in the south. At 2000 m, the temperature will increase to around -2°C in the north and -6°C in the south. The avalanche danger will not change significantly. Fresh and somewhat older snowdrift accumulations will be prone to triggering in places. In addition, avalanches may be triggered in deeper layers of the snowpack, especially on north-facing slopes above 2400 m and in the high Alpine regions.

Monday

Precipitation will set in from the west on Sunday evening. There will be widespread precipitation during the night and on Monday, heavy in the west. The snowfall level will be between 900 and 1300 m. In western Lower Valais and the Vaud Alps, 40 to 60 cm of snow will fall by Monday evening, 15 to 30 cm in the rest of Valais and on the northern flank of the Alps. There will be moderate to strong southwesterly winds. With new fallen snow and southwesterly winds, snowdrift accumulations will form that are prone to triggering. The avalanche danger will increase in the north, appreciably so in the west. Naturally triggered avalanches will be increasingly possible in the regions exposed to heavier precipitation in the west. In the east and south, the avalanche danger will not change significantly.

Issued

21 Nov 15:15 UTC

Valid until

22 Nov 16:00 UTC

Next update

22 Nov 16:00 UTC

Adjoining regions

Get avalanche alerts

Enter your email to receive daily bulletin updates for this region.

Sending…