Central Grisons and Anterior Rhine
Hard-to-read day. Persistent or gliding-snow problems can mask the real risk.
The large volumes of fresh and drifted snow from the last few days and weeks remain prone to triggering in many places.
North of a line from the Rhône to the Rhine and in the extreme west of Lower Valais, 2 to 3.5 m of snow have fallen over the last two weeks. As a result, weak layers in the old snowpack are thickly covered and are now barely triggerable by human activity. However, avalanches can occasionally propagate into deep layers, becoming very large as a result.
South of the line from the Rhône to the Rhine, the persistent weak layers are still pronounced. The weakly bonded old snowpack is most prone to triggering in Grisons, where avalanche-prone locations are still common, even around the treeline. Whumpfing sounds and remote triggering are typical. In southern Valais, the significant weak layers in the lower part of the snowpack are mostly rather more thickly covered. Avalanche-prone locations where avalanches can be triggered in the weak old snowpack are therefore somewhat less frequent and mainly located in areas with little snow.
With the mild temperatures, medium to large gliding avalanches are to be expected on steep grassy slopes below approximately 2000 m.
The precipitation ended during the night into Sunday, most recently in the east. When the precipitation ended, the snowfall level was around 1500 m. It was quite sunny during the day.
From Saturday afternoon to Sunday morning above 2000 m:
Since this period of precipitation began on Friday evening, the following amounts of snow have fallen above 2000 m:
At midday at 2000 m, between +2 °C in the north and +5 °C in the south
There will be widespread precipitation during the night and in the late morning. As the day progresses, there will be bright spells. In the south it will be dry and mostly sunny during the day. The snowfall level will be between 1600 m and 1800 m in the north, while in southern Valais it may rise to around 2000 m.
From Sunday evening to Monday afternoon above 2200 m:
At midday at 2000 m, between 0 °C in the north and +4 °C in the south
Westerly to northwesterly winds, moderate in many places and strong at high altitudes
On Tuesday, snow will fall on the eastern part of the northern flank of the Alps and in northern Grisons above 1800 m. 10 to 20 cm of new snow is to be expected at high altitudes. However, the quantities are still uncertain. It will be sunny and very mild in the west and south. The northwesterly wind will be strong at times during the night into Tuesday, then it will ease. On Wednesday it will be sunny with light winds and very mild, with a zero-degree level of around 3000 m.
The danger of dry avalanches will not change significantly on Tuesday in the areas with new fallen snow, otherwise it will decrease; however, it will only decrease very slowly in southern Valais, Ticino and Grisons due to the pronounced weak layers. Gliding avalanches are to be expected, including large avalanches in the west and north.
Issued
23 Feb 07:00 UTC
Valid until
23 Feb 16:00 UTC
Next update
23 Feb 16:00 UTC
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