Central Grisons and Anterior Rhine
Dangerous conditions. High to very high danger — backcountry travel is not recommended.
The old snowpack contains coarse-grained weak layers in many places. North of a line from the Rhône to the Rhine, these are thickly covered and are only triggerable in isolated cases. The main danger here stems from the fresh and drifted snow which, on northern slopes, has in places been deposited on surface hoar. South of a line from the Rhône to the Rhine, breaks in the deeper weak layers are again expected with the sometimes large amounts of fresh snow over the weekend, and, as a result, avalanches in these areas may sometimes become very large.
Saturday saw mostly heavy cloud and widespread precipitation, which was heavy in the south during the day. The snowfall level dropped from 1300 m to low altitudes in the north and from 1600 to 1300 m in the south.
Up until Saturday afternoon, above 1800 m:
At midday at 2000 m, between -6 °C in the northwest and -1 °C in the southeast
There will be widespread precipitation during the night, which will be very heavy in the south, and will also spread northwards well over the main Alpine ridge due to the countercurrent situation. Precipitation will continue during the day in the south, but will be less heavy. In other regions there will be sunny intervals. The north will see snowfall down to low altitudes, while in the south snow will fall above 800 to 1200 m.
From Saturday afternoon until precipitation ends on Sunday, above 1000 m in the north and 1500 m in the south:
At midday at 2000 m, between -6 °C in the north and -2 °C in the south
In the north, Monday morning will see sunny intervals before becoming very cloudy. Between midday on Monday and Tuesday morning, 5 to 15 cm of snow will fall on the northern flank of the Alps above 800 m. Tuesday will see residual clouds in the east at the beginning, while otherwise conditions will be sunny. Both days will be sunny in the south. During the day on Monday the wind will be a moderate to strong westerly, while overnight to Tuesday the wind will be a strong northerly at high altitudes, occasionally storm-force in the south, transporting the often loose fresh snow from the weekend.
Avalanche danger will generally decrease. With the strong wind, however, snowdrift accumulations that are prone to triggering will develop, on Monday in the north and on Tuesday in the south. Where there is sunshine, the new snow will also make moist avalanches likely, with these becoming numerous and occasionally large on Monday in the south.
Issued
15 Mar 07:00 UTC
Valid until
15 Mar 16:00 UTC
Next update
15 Mar 16:00 UTC
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