Blast of late-winter snow forecast for highway passes in southern B.C., bringing high avalanche risk - Action News
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British Columbia

Blast of late-winter snow forecast for highway passes in southern B.C., bringing high avalanche risk

Extreme winter conditions persist on British Columbia's southern mountain passes, with snowfallwarnings posted for most routes, as Avalanche Canada raises the risk to high over much of the South Coast and southern Interior.

Up to 25 cm to fall on some passes; new snow will create 'very dangerous' conditions, Avalanche Canada says

A snowy highway is pictured in a mountain pass.
The northbound lanes of the Coquihalla Highway near the Britton Creek Rest Area just before 7:30 a.m. PT Monday. The highway is forecast to receive up to 25 cm more snow by Tuesday morning. (DriveBC)

The first day of spring is a week awaybut extreme winter conditions persist on British Columbia's southern mountain passes, with snowfallwarnings posted for most routes.

Environment Canada says 15-25 centimetres is expected at higher elevations of the passes north and east of Hope, including the Coquihalla Highway, by Tuesday morning.

Up to 15 centimetres ofsnowis forecast along the Sea-to-Sky Highway between Squamish and Whistler, but the weather office says conditions there should ease by later in the day.

The warnings come as Avalanche Canada raises the risk to high over much of the South Coast and southern Interior.

It says the newsnow, combined with strong winds and warmingtemperatures, will create "very dangerous'' avalanche conditions, with large, naturally triggered slides likely.

The high danger ratings come just days after Avalanche Canada released more details about the deaths of three German tourists in an avalanche near Invermere, B.C., on March 1, saying two of the victims died on the hill and another died in hospital after a group of 10 heli-skiers triggered the powerful slide.

The report says the entire group was swept into the sparse, forested area beside the larger avalanche path, critically injuring the guide and two other survivors and leaving a fourth person with less serious injuries.

Twelve people have died in six separate avalanches around southern B.C. since January, and Avalanche Canada continues to warn people to make "conservative, low-consequence choices'' if they head into the backcountry at all.