Central Grisons and Anterior Rhine
Hard-to-read day. Persistent or gliding-snow problems can mask the real risk.
In the regions south of a line from the Rhône to the Rhine, the persistent weak layers that have persisted since the beginning of January are still present. The number of places where human activity can trigger avalanches in the weak layers of the old snowpack has now decreased significantly. However, any avalanches may still become large.
In the regions north of a line from the Rhône to the Rhine and in the extreme west of Lower Valais, the weak layers in the old snowpack are thickly covered and triggering by human activity is therefore unlikely. The danger here is primarily due to drifted new snow.
With temperatures falling, further moistening of the snowpack and deeper weak layers has slowed down. Gliding avalanche activity has also decreased significantly over the last few days.
Overnight to Thursday, some snow fell above approximately 1400 m. Over the course of the day, conditions gradually became sunny in the west and south, but the northern flank of the Alps and northern Grisons saw only sunny intervals.
From Wednesday evening to Thursday morning, above 1600 m:
At midday at 2000 m, between -1 °C in the north and +2 °C in the south
Skies will mostly be clear overnight to Friday. During the day, conditions will mostly be sunny in the north, with sunny intervals in the south.
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At midday at 2000 m, between +2 °C in the north and -1 °C in the south
In the south, there will be precipitation, which will be heavy from Saturday morning to Sunday morning. In the north, precipitation will move in from the west on Saturday, while there will be broken cloud with isolated showers on Sunday. The snowfall level will drop from 1500 m to around 1200 m in the south and to low altitudes in the north. A total of 60 to 80 cm of snow will fall on the main Alpine ridge from Monte Rosa to the San Bernardino Pass and south of there, while around 100 cm will fall in western Ticino. Around 50 cm of fresh snow will fall on the rest of the main Alpine ridge between the Great St. Bernard and Bernina Pass and on the central part of the northern flank of the Alps, with less falling elsewhere. There will be moderate to strong winds from southerly directions on Saturday which will then ease.
The wind and fresh snow mean that the danger of dry avalanches will increase in many areas, significantly so on the central part of the main Alpine ridge and south of there, where increasing numbers of naturally triggered avalanches are to be expected. The danger level may rise to 4 (high) overnight to Sunday, while in western Ticino an increase to level 4 (high) is probable.
Issued
12 Mar 16:00 UTC
Valid until
13 Mar 16:00 UTC
Next update
13 Mar 16:00 UTC
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