Central Grisons and Anterior Rhine
Hard-to-read day. Persistent or gliding-snow problems can mask the real risk.
Over the last few days there has been heavy snowfall in the north, which in particular at the start was transported by strong to storm-force winds. In the south, the sometimes storm-force northerly wind has primarily transported loose old snow.
On shady slopes sheltered from the wind in particular, the fresh and drifted snow is overlying weak layers and also buried surface hoar in the upper part of the old snowpack. Saturday saw avalanches triggered in these weak layers by winter sports participants. In the inneralpine regions of Valais and especially Grisons, the snowpack remains weak, and there is a possibility of isolated avalanches releasing even in near-ground weak layers.
With fresh snow and wind, further mostly small snowdrift accumulations will form on Sunday in the north.
The day started off sunny, but clouds gathered from the west in the afternoon, with the first snowflakes falling in the Jura.
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At midday at 2000 m, between -4 °C in the north and +1 °C in the south
Moderate northerly, strong at times on the main Alpine ridge
Snow will fall overnight down to low altitudes. Only the south will remain dry. During the day, conditions will remain very cloudy in the north, with a little snow continuing to fall primarily in the northeast. Conditions will be mostly sunny in Valais and the south.
At midday at 2000 m, between -8 °C in the north and -4 °C in the south
After a calmer spell overnight, an increasingly strong northwesterly wind will set in on Monday. On Monday evening, the wind will veer to the north and will reach storm-force at times at high altitudes and in the south. On Monday morning there will be light snowfall at first, which will become heavy down to low altitudes from midday onwards. By Tuesday afternoon, 50 to 70 cm of snow will have fallen on the northern Alpine ridge and in northern Prättigau, with a widespread 20 to 40 cm elsewhere. In the far south, both days will be comparatively dry and sunny.
Avalanche danger will not change significantly in the south, but in all other areas it will increase from midday on Monday. In the north, increasing numbers of naturally triggered avalanches are to be expected, with danger level 4 (high) possibly being reached in places over the course of Tuesday.
Issued
29 Mar 06:00 UTC
Valid until
29 Mar 15:00 UTC
Next update
29 Mar 15:00 UTC
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