Central Grisons and Anterior Rhine
Hard-to-read day. Persistent or gliding-snow problems can mask the real risk.
The abundant fresh and drifted snow in the west and south is prone to triggering, and in many areas is also lying on a weak snowpack. In many places, the old snow surface had become faceted and loose before the fresh snowfall. In addition, there are distinct weak layers that are prone to triggering in the middle and lower part of the snowpack, especially south of a line from the Rhône to the Rhine. As a result, fractures can propagate over long distances. Extensive avalanches may start in particular from catchment areas which have not seen any previous releases, taking the entire snowpack with them.
North of the line from the Rhône to the Rhine, snowpack structure is often somewhat more favourable, but there are weak layers deeper in the old snowpack in these regions too. In some places, avalanches can also be triggered in these deep layers.
Below approximately 1600 m, the snowpack is wet, especially in the north and west, due to the sometimes heavy rain.
In the west and north, conditions were overcast and there was heavy precipitation at times. The snowfall level in the extreme west of Lower Valais and on the northern flank of the Alps was between 1500 and 1800 m, elsewhere between 1000 and 1500 m, while there were sunny intervals in the south.
From the onset of precipitation on Tuesday morning until Wednesday afternoon above 2200 m:
Most of the fresh snow has fallen since Tuesday evening.
At midday at 2000 m, between 0 °C in the north and -2 °C in the south
Moderate to strong from westerly directions in the north, light to moderate southerly in the south
In the north, conditions will be very cloudy, with heavy precipitation at times. During the night to Thursday, the snowfall level in the west and north will rise to 1800 m at times, but otherwise it will be between 1000 and 1400 m.
There will be only a small amount of precipitation in the south, with some bright spells.
From midday on Wednesday to midday on Thursday above 2000 m:
The peaks of western Jura will also see 15 to 30 cm of snowfall.
At midday at 2000 m, around -2 °C
Veering from southwesterly to northwesterly
From midday on Thursday into the night to Friday, heavy precipitation will continue to fall in the west and north. A further 20 to 40 cm of fresh snow is expected in Lower Valais, on the northern flank of the Alps and in northern Grisons. The snowfall level will be between 1000 and 1200 m. Precipitation will come to an end during the second half of the night and skies will clear. During the day there will be sunny intervals, with conditions being mostly sunny in the south and in Grisons. In the afternoon, cloud will move in again from the west. The night will continue to see storm-force westerly winds, which will die down during the day.
Avalanche danger will increase somewhat in some regions during the night to Friday and may reach danger level 4 (high) in further regions on the northern flank of the Alps and in northern Grisons. Very large avalanches are possible at times in Valais and on the northern flank of the Alps, these being capable of descending right down into the valleys and endangering exposed transportation routes. In Grisons, the risk relates primarily to alpine snow sports terrain. As the precipitation comes to an end, naturally occurring slab avalanche activity will decrease. Numerous loose snow avalanches are to be expected in areas with a lot of fresh snow.
On Saturday, conditions will be very cloudy with a little widespread precipitation. Avalanche danger will decrease somewhat in the west and north but will not change significantly in other regions.
Issued
12 Feb 07:00 UTC
Valid until
12 Feb 16:00 UTC
Next update
12 Feb 16:00 UTC
Enter your email to receive daily bulletin updates for this region.